News Release

Earth's oldest-known rocks provide clues about early tectonics

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Chinese Academy of Sciences Headquarters

Earth’s oldest rock: 4-billion-year-old granitic rock from Northwest Territories, Canada

image: Earth’s oldest rock: 4-billion-year-old granitic rock from Northwest Territories, Canada view more 

Credit: Prof. LI Xianhua’s group

Earth is currently the only planet known to harbor life—thanks in large part due to the operation of plate tectonics, which cycles critical biogeochemical elements and maintains a planetary thermostat. Subduction—the destructive force of plate tectonics that pushes one plate beneath another—is the most telltale sign of plate tectonics' great recycling program.

But how far back in time can we trace evidence of plate tectonics? Did Earth's plates always function as today, with subduction and surface material recycling? Previous studies using numerical geodynamic modelling have argued that subduction and recycling were operating from as early as ~4.3 Ga ago. Since Earth itself is only 4.5 Ga old, such a claim argues for plate tectonics from almost day one.

However, new geochemical evidence obtained from Earth's oldest-known rocks—found in remote lake regions of northern Canada—paints a starkly different picture of Earth's earliest history.

The study presenting this evidence, which was published in Science Advances on June 30, was conducted by researchers led by Prof. LI Xianhua from the Institute of Geology and Geophysics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (IGGCAS), in collaboration with colleagues from Australia and Canada as well as China.

"Our oldest samples show no sign of surficial material recycling at 4.0 Ga," said Prof. LI, co-corresponding author of the study. "And the earliest evidence we find for surface recycling into magmas isn't until 3.8 Ga."

Silicon (Si) and oxygen (O) isotopes in granitic rocks are tracers of surface material recycling in magma. On ancient Earth, seawater was saturated with Si and rich in heavy Si due to the lack of lifeforms to consume it. Thus, if any heavy Si materials from the seafloor were recycled back into magma chambers by subduction, then heavy Si isotopes would be detected in granitic rock samples.

"One of the difficulties in applying this technique to ancient rocks is identifying the primary Si isotope composition. This is because these rocks have been reworked by heat and pressure repeatedly throughout Earth's long history," said ZHANG Qing from IGGCAS, lead author of the study.

Zircon, the most abundant datable mineral in granitic rocks, is also conveniently resistant to weathering and later alteration. Applying ultra-high precision analytical techniques to zircon can provide the most reliable constraints on whether the detected Si isotope composition represents the primary signature.

"[The researchers'] study proposed systematic screening criteria for evaluating the data. I must commend them on their careful evaluation of their zircon Si and O isotope data," said an anonymous reviewer of the paper.

The absence of a heavy Si signature in the 4.0 Ga rocks means the oldest samples didn't require subduction.

"Nonetheless, given that the oldest rocks are from a single locality, no subduction needed for one small area doesn't mean no plate subduction on the planet at 4.0 Ga," said co-author Allen Nutman from Australia's University of Wollongong.

After careful filtering, though, the data revealed a distinct shift at 3.8 Ga in both Si and O isotopes. For this reason, based on current data, the study concludes that a possible change in Earth's geodynamics, such as the onset of plate subduction, occurred at 3.8 Ga.

"It was already amazing that these oldest rocks are preserved," said co-author Ross Mitchell from IGGCAS, "and now we learn that they also tell a tectonic coming of age story as well."


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