homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Researchers find Earth's oldest rocks -- and they were probably created by meteorites

4 billion years -- how's that for old?

Alexandra Gerea
August 13, 2018 @ 6:42 pm

share Share

Scientists have found 4.02 billion-year-old rocks, which they believe to be the oldest rocks on the planet’s surface. These rocks, they explain, were likely created by meteorites.

The year is 4 billion BC — and the Earth is a hellish place. The planet doesn’t really have an atmosphere to shield it from meteorite impacts, and the planetary surface is still in its nascent days. As far as we know, no living creatures can inhabit Earth under these conditions — but this doesn’t mean the Earth is inactive. Geologically, lots of things are happening, and researchers have found strong evidence of this.

Australian geologists investigated the Slave Craton formation in Northern Canada, north of Yellowknife and the Great Slave Lake. This is one of the oldest and most stable tectonic structures on our planet, which makes it an ideal place to search for rocks from that period. In particular, researchers have focused on some areas near the Acasta River, discovering 4.02 billion-year-old silica-rich felsic rocks.

[panel style=”panel-default” title=”Felsic and Mafic” footer=””]Igneous rocks, which formed through the slow cooling of magmatic rocks, are typically split into two main groups: felsic, and mafic.

Felsic rocks are relatively rich in elements that form feldspar and quartz, contrasting with the mafic rocks, which are relatively rich in magnesium and iron. The term “felsic” combines the words “feldspar” and “silica”, while the word “mafic” combines “magnesium” and “ferric.”

Generally speaking, felsic rocks tend to be whiter or lighter than mafic rocks, which are generally dark and black.[/panel]

Scientists have long known that the Acasta rocks are very different from the vast majority of felsic rocks, such as granites. Now, in a new study, researchers have shown how these rocks may have formed — and it involves meteorites.

“Our modelling shows that the Acasta River rocks derived from the melting of pre-existing iron-rich basaltic rock, which formed the uppermost layers of crust on the primitive Earth”, said team leader Tim Johnson, from Curtin University, Perth.

They found that the Acasta River rocks were produced by partial melting of previously mafic rocks. This process happened at very low pressures, indicating that they were close to the surface. But there’s not much reason why the 900°C temperatures needed to melt the rocks would have been reached near the surface. Researchers suspect there was a drastic event, most likely a meteorite bombardment, that caused this rise in temperature.

“We estimate that rocks within the uppermost 3km of mafic crust would have been melted in producing the rocks we see today. We think that these ancient felsic rocks would have been very common, but the passage of 4 billion years, and the development of plate tectonics, means that almost nothing remains,” Johnson continues.

“We believe that these rocks may be the only surviving remnants of a barrage of extraterrestial impacts which characterized the first 600 million years of Earth History”.

The study has been published in Nature Geoscience and will be presented at the Goldschmidt conference on the 14th of August.

share Share

Cicadacore: Scientists Turn Summer’s Loudest Insects into Musical Cyborgs

Researchers hijack cicadas' song organs to play music—including Pachelbel's Canon.

Tesla’s Sales in Europe Are Plummeting Because of Elon Musk's Borderline Fascist Politics

Tesla’s sales plunge across Europe as EV buyers turn elsewhere

How dogs and cats are evolving to look alike and why it’s humans’ fault

Human fashion can be as powerful as millions of years of evolution – and it’s harming our pets.

Mathematicians Just Solved a 125-Year-Old Problem That Unites Three Major Theories of Physics

A new mathematical proof connects atoms to ocean waves and jet streams.

Nature Built a Nuclear Reactor 2 Billion Years Ago — Here’s How It Worked

Billions of years ago, this uranium went a bit crazy.

Archaeologists Discover 1,800-Year-Old Roman Cavalry Horse Cemetery in Germany

These horses served the Roman Empire and were buried with military precision.

What Your Emoji Use Really Says About You, According to Science

If you use a lot of emojis, you'll want to read this.

How Declassified Cold War Satellite Images Are Helping Find Bombs and Mines Buried for Decades in Southeast Asia

Old spy satellites and new AI help unearth the hidden bombs of Southeast Asia.

Your Brain Data May be Up For Sale and It's Totally Legal (For Now), Say U.S. Senators

Lawmakers warn brainwave data could expose mental health and be sold without consent.

6 Genetic Myths Still Taught in Schools (That Science Says Are Wrong)

Many traits we learn as 'genetic facts' are more folklore than fact.