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10.5: Key Points

  • Page ID
    33482
    • Callan Bentley, Karen Layou, Russ Kohrs, Shelley Jaye, Matt Affolter, and Brian Ricketts
    • OpenGeology

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    • Earth formed about 4.6 billion years ago from a solar nebula, along with the rest of our solar system. It grew through the accretion of nebular material that ranged in size from space dust to planetesimals (minute planets).
    • The Hadean was a time when magma oceans boiled on the surface, there was widespread volcanic activity and a superheated atmosphere of noxious gases, and frequent impacts by extraterrestrial objects.
    • Earth’s water may have originated from volcanic outgassing, comets, and/or meteorites.
    • Earth's first crust was ultramafic to mafic in composition and was frequently rifted apart by heat rising from Earth's hotter core.
    • Based on lab analysis of zircon grains found in metamorphosed sedimentary rock, a felsic continental crust may have started forming in the Hadean, perhaps as early as 4.4 Ga.
    • The oldest intact rock on Earth is the 4.02 Ga Acasta Gneiss Complex of northwest Canada. Its composition, similar to that of continental crust rocks today, indicates that continental crust existed in the Hadean.
    • The Nuvvuagittuq Greenstone Belt (NGB) may be as old as 4.3 Ga, and may be the best representation of Earth’s earliest crust. It's metamorphosed mafic and ultramafic volcanic rock that initially erupted in an ancient ocean.
    • The cratons or cores of the continents formed during the Archean as differentiation occurred and lighter materials formed continental crust.
    • Plate tectonic processes started at the end of the Archean and added material to the cratons through accretion and continental volcanic activity.
    • First life that is definitely preserved in the fossil record are 3.5 billion year old stromatolites beds in Australia. Still, microscopic hematite tubes imply that life could have started even earlier along hydrothermal vent systems like those found today along mid-ocean ridges.

    This page titled 10.5: Key Points is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Callan Bentley, Karen Layou, Russ Kohrs, Shelley Jaye, Matt Affolter, and Brian Ricketts (OpenGeology) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.