Cosmos

Pilbara rocks speak of Earth’s f irst continents

A new study of rocks in Western Australia’s Pilbara region rewrites the history of early continent formation on our planet.

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Anew study of the famous iron-red rocks in Western Australia’s arid Pilbara region has revealed that the formation of Earth’s first continents occurred in a different way than originally thought.

The research, published in the journal Nature, sought to understand how the granite that made up the Earth’s earliest continents at the end of the Archaean eon (some 2.5 billion years ago) was formed.

Critically, the researcher­s wanted to find where the water required for the granite’s formation came from.

To understand what Earth’s early history may have been like, the researcher­s tested the variation of oxygen isotope compositio­n of zircon and compared this with the geochemist­ry of the rocks from the Pilbara.

They found that the water in the type of granite present could not have come from the sky.

The study proposes that rather than coming from above, the water came from hydrated near-surface basalt rocks that were circulated into the Earth’s mantle through the process of overturn of the crust.

If this is correct, it means that rock formation processes in Earth’s early history were incredibly different from today.

Under these strange conditions, this mantle water may have been instrument­al in forming the continents during Earth’s early years.

The study was a collaborat­ion between Curtin University, the University of Western Australia, Geoscience Australia, and the Geological Survey of Western Australia.

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