from the it's-very-subtle-the-continental dept.
Dr Tim Johnson, from Curtin's School of Earth and Planetary Sciences, said the idea that the continents originally formed at sites of giant meteorite impacts had been around for decades, but until now there was little solid evidence to support the theory.
"By examining tiny crystals of the mineral zircon in rocks from the Pilbara Craton in Western Australia, which represents Earth's best-preserved remnant of ancient crust, we found evidence of these giant meteorite impacts," Dr Johnson said.
"Studying the composition of oxygen isotopes in these zircon crystals revealed a 'top-down' process starting with the melting of rocks near the surface and progressing deeper, consistent with the geological effect of giant meteorite impacts.
"Our research provides the first solid evidence that the processes that ultimately formed the continents began with giant meteorite impacts, similar to those responsible for the extinction of the dinosaurs, but which occurred billions of years earlier."
[...] "These mineral deposits are the end result of a process known as crustal differentiation, which began with the formation of the earliest landmasses, of which the Pilbara Craton is just one of many.
Journal Reference:
Johnson, T.E., Kirkland, C.L., Lu, Y. et al. Giant impacts and the origin and evolution of continents. Nature 608, 330–335 (2022). 10.1038/s41586-022-04956-y
(Score: 1) by MonkeypoxBugChaser on Thursday August 18 2022, @11:12PM (1 child)
Water flows into holes. But what about pangea and plate tectonics? Or is it what's left that moves around.
(Score: 2, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Friday August 19 2022, @12:25AM
If you go to the Nature paper, it is paywalled, but they do show you the figures. If I'm interpreting it correctly, they're saying the Earth mantle was covered by a primary thin crust and thin ocean. A large impact hits it and fractures the crust causing a welt, and eventually the welt gets pushed up by volcanism from the mantle below and forms the continents (I suppose, one per impact). The paper abstract compares that part to what's going on in Iceland today. And the pushing up in the middle gets the uplifting and subduction processes churning.