The Asian Age

When life’s building blocks reached Earth decoded

The findings suggest elements important for life not present when planet began to form

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Berlin, March 13: A large proportion of the elements that are important for the formation of oceans and life, such as water, carbon, and nitrogen, were not already present when the Earth began to form, but were delivered to the planet very late in its history, according to a new study.

While it was previously assumed that water-bearing planetary building blocks, like asteroids, were already delivered to the Earth during the early stages of its formation, the findings, published in the journal Nature, suggest that most of the water was only delivered to the planet when its formation was almost complete. According to the researcher­s, including those from the University of Cologne in Germany, volatile elements such as water originated on the Earth from asteroids — the ‘planetary building blocks’ that formed in the outer solar system. However, they said, when precisely these asteroids came to the Earth is a topic widely debated among scientists. “We have now been able to narrow down the time frame much more precisely,” said study first author Mario Fischer-Godde from the University of Cologne. “To do so, we compared the compositio­n of the oldest, approximat­ely 3.8 billionyea­r-old mantle rocks from the Archean Eon with the compositio­n of the asteroids from which they may have formed, and with the present-day compositio­n of the Earth’s mantle,” FischerGod­de said.

In the study, the researcher­s measured the abundances of alternate forms of a very rare metal called ruthenium, which was already present in the Earth’s mantle by Archean time — which began about four billion years ago with the formation of the planet’s crust, and extended to about 2.5 billion years ago. They said this rare element, belonging to the same group in the periodic table as the lustrous metal platinum, is an indicator for the late growth phase of the Earth. “Platinum group metals like ruthenium have an extremely high tendency to combine with iron. Therefore, when the Earth formed all ruthenium must have been completely sequestere­d into the Earth’s metallic core,” said Fischer-Godde.

However, the scientists said the presence of ruthenium in the Earth’s mantle indicated they may have been added after the planet’s formation.

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