Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Part I The astronomical planet: Earth's place in the cosmos
- Part II The measurable planet: tools to discern the history of Earth and the planets
- Part III The historical planet: Earth and solar system through time
- 10 Formation of the solar system
- 11 The Hadean Earth
- 12 The Archean eon and the origin of life I Properties of and sites for life
- 13 The Archean eon and the origin of life II Mechanisms
- 14 The first greenhouse crisis: the faint young Sun
- 15 Climate histories of Mars and Venus, and the habitability of planets
- 16 Earth in transition: from the Archean to the Proterozoic
- 17 The oxygen revolution
- 18 The Phanerozoic: flowering and extinction of complex life
- 19 Climate change across the Phanerozoic
- 20 Toward the age of humankind
- Part IV The once and future planet
- Index
- Plate section
16 - Earth in transition: from the Archean to the Proterozoic
from Part III - The historical planet: Earth and solar system through time
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Part I The astronomical planet: Earth's place in the cosmos
- Part II The measurable planet: tools to discern the history of Earth and the planets
- Part III The historical planet: Earth and solar system through time
- 10 Formation of the solar system
- 11 The Hadean Earth
- 12 The Archean eon and the origin of life I Properties of and sites for life
- 13 The Archean eon and the origin of life II Mechanisms
- 14 The first greenhouse crisis: the faint young Sun
- 15 Climate histories of Mars and Venus, and the habitability of planets
- 16 Earth in transition: from the Archean to the Proterozoic
- 17 The oxygen revolution
- 18 The Phanerozoic: flowering and extinction of complex life
- 19 Climate change across the Phanerozoic
- 20 Toward the age of humankind
- Part IV The once and future planet
- Index
- Plate section
Summary
Introduction
The beginning of the Proterozoic eon is set formally by geologists at 2.5 billion years before present. However, the transition between the Archean and the Proterozoic is not a sharp one. From about 3.2 billion to 2.5 billion years ago, rocks with a modern granitic composition made a widespread appearance in the geologic record. Prior to this time, rocks making up the Archean continents had a composition different from modern granites in several important respects. Beginning around 3.2 billion years ago in what is now Africa, and extending to 2.6 billion years ago on the Canadian shield, large quantities of modern-type granites were produced. We can collect these rocks today and date them by use of radioisotopes. How did the original Archean continents form? Why was there a transition in chemical composition of the rocks roughly halfway through the Archean? What might Earth have been like today if this eruption of new rock types had not occurred? As we see, the transformation wrought on Earth's primitive continents may have been an inevitable consequence of their increasing coverage of Earth's surface.
What might have been inevitable on Earth was apparently difficult or impossible on the other terrestrial planets. No evidence for large granitic masses exists on any other planet. Venus bears two crustal masses that resemble continents, but the details of their geology suggest that they are more similar to primitive Archean continents than to our modern ones and, even then, the connection is a weak one.
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- Information
- EarthEvolution of a Habitable World, pp. 189 - 202Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2013