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- Title
Emergence of modern continental crust about 3 billion years ago.
- Authors
Dhuime, Bruno; Wuestefeld, Andreas; Hawkesworth, Chris J.
- Abstract
The continental crust is the principal record of conditions on the Earth during the past 4.4 billion years. However, how the continental crust formed and evolved through time remains highly controversial. In particular, the composition and thickness of juvenile continental crust are unknown. Here we show that Rb/Sr ratios can be used as a proxy for both the silica content and the thickness of the continental crust. We calculate Rb/Sr ratios of the juvenile crust for over 13,000 samples, with Nd model ages ranging from the Hadean to Phanerozoic. The ratios were calculated based on the evolution of Sr isotopes in the period between the TDM Nd model age and the crystallization of the samples analysed. We find that the juvenile crust had a low silica content and was largely mafic in composition during the first 1.5 billion years of Earth's evolution, consistent with magmatism on a pre-plate tectonics planet. About 3 billion years ago, the Rb/Sr ratios of the juvenile continental crust increased, indicating that the newly formed crust became more silica-rich and probably thicker. This transition is in turn linked to the onset of plate tectonics and an increase of continental detritus into the oceans.
- Subjects
CONTINENTAL crust; SILICA; STRONTIUM isotopes; CRYSTALLIZATION; PLATE tectonics; CRUST of the earth
- Publication
Nature Geoscience, 2015, Vol 8, Issue 7, p552
- ISSN
1752-0894
- Publication type
Academic Journal
- DOI
10.1038/ngeo2466