tectonics and climate of the precambrian

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Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian Geology 103

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Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian. Geology 103. When Did the Solar System Form?. 4.56 billion years ago How do we know? (evidence for formation). Lunar samples - 4.5 to 4.6 Ga Meteorites - 4.56 Ga Earth – 3.9 (or 4.4 Ga). Lunar meteorite at - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

Geology 103

Page 2: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

When Did the Solar System Form?

• 4.56 billion years ago

• How do we know? (evidence for formation)

Meteorite photo by Carl Allen athttp://ares.jsc.nasa.gov/Education/Activities/ExpMetMys/..%5C..%5CSlideSets/ExpMetMys/Slides1-9.htm

•Lunar samples - 4.5 to 4.6 Ga•Meteorites - 4.56 Ga•Earth – 3.9 (or 4.4 Ga)

Lunar meteorite athttp://meteorites.wustl.edu/lunar/stones/mac88105.htm

Page 3: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

How Did We Get a Solar System?

Huge cloud of cold, thinly dispersed interstellar gas and dust – threaded with magnetic fields that resist collapse – solar nebula theory of Swedenborg (1734), Kant (1755) and Laplace (1796).

Hubble image at http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/archive/releases/nebula/emission/2006/41/image/a/

Image: LPI

Page 4: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

Concentrations of dust and gas in the cloud; material starts to collect (gravity > magnetic forces)

How Did We Get a Solar System?

Hubble image at http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/archive/releases/nebula/emission/2005/35/image/a/

Image: LPI

Page 5: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

How Did We Get a Solar System?Gravity concentrates most stuff near center

Heat and pressure increase

Collapses – central proto-sun rotates faster (probably got initial rotation from the cloud)

Image: LPI http://www.lpi.usra.edu/education/timeline/gallery/slide_1.html

Page 6: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

How Did We Get a Solar System?

NASA artwork at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Ra4-protoplanetary-disk.jpg

•Rotating, flattening, contracting disk - solar nebula!

Equatorial Plane

Orbit Direction

Page 7: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

•After ~10 million years, material in center of nebula hot enough to fuse H

•“...here comes the sun…”

How Did We Get a Solar System?

NASA/JPL-Caltech Image at http://www.nasa.gov/vision/universe/starsgalaxies/spitzer-20060724.html

Page 8: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

How Did We Get a Solar System?

Hubble photo at http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/archive/releases/star/protoplanetary-disk/2005/10/image/a/layout/thumb/

•Metallic elements (Mg, Si, Fe) condense into solids at high temps. Combined with O to make tiny grains

•Lower temp (H, He, CH4, H2O, N2, ice) - outer edges

Planetary Compositions

Page 9: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

How Did We Get a Solar System?

Inner Planets:•Hot – Silicate minerals, metals, no light elements, ice

•Begin to stick together with dust clumpsImage: LPI http://www.lpi.usra.edu/education/timeline/gallery/slide_3.html

Page 10: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

How Did We Get a Solar System?

•Accretion - particles collide and stick together … or break apart … gravity not involved if small pieces

•Form planetesimals, up to a few km acrossImage: LPI http://www.lpi.usra.edu/education/timeline/gallery/slide_3.html

Page 11: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

How Did We Get a Solar System?

•Gravitational accretion: planetesimals attract stuff

•Large protoplanets dominate, grow rapidly, clean up area ( takes ~10 to 25 My)Image: LPI http://www.lpi.usra.edu/education/timeline/gallery/slide_4.html

Page 12: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

The Precambrian divisions are defined broadly by atmospheric changes

• Hadean: Lots of carbon dioxide, water vapor and methane

• Archean: Water vapor forms oceans, oxygen starts to be made by photosynthetic organisms

• Proterozoic: Significant oxygen in atmosphere, massive drop in carbon dioxide

Page 13: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

Graphically…

Page 14: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

Period of major accretion (~ 10-30 my)

{Period of heavy bombardment

Present-day plate tectonics “begins”

Some boundaries coincide with other events

Page 15: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

Period of major accretion (~ 10-30 my)

{Period of heavy bombardment

Present-day plate tectonics “begins”

period of rapid crustal growth

Archaen-Proterozoic transitionTo modern plate tectonics

1. Early plates became bigger and thicker2. Continued recycling of oceanic crustformed large amounts of buoyantcontinental crust• Continued partial melting/distillation• Separation of Si and other elements fromMg and Fe• Conversion of mafic material to felsic material through rock cycle3. Decrease in heat production slowed mantleconvection• Drove system to larger convection cells• Allowed larger plates to travel farther on the Earth’s surface and cool more• Led to subduction rather than collision ofplates• Modern plate tectonics

Page 16: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

The Witwatersrand (South Africa) goldfields

Page 17: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

Evidence against the theory

• Not all gold deposits are the same age

• Clearly, some other mechanism deposits gold in this fashion – anoxic inland seas?

Page 18: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

More evidence for atmospheric change in Archean

• Banded iron formations (BIFs) are interlayered alternating chert (jasper) and iron oxide

• Mostly found in Archean, some in Proterozoic, almost none in the Phanerozoic

Page 19: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

Mechanism for generating BIFs

Page 20: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

Since the Archaean

• Intensity of plate tectonics has varied over time• Wilson cycles – 500 my cycles

– Evidence of a supercontinent at 600-900 my (Rodinia)– Pangea formed ~ 300 my

• Periods of rapid sea floor spreading (and vice versa)– Sea level rises because large amounts of shallow basalt

form and don’t cool (and subside) much– High CO2 release – released at spreading centers when

new crust forms and subducting crust has sediment on it including calcite which releases CO2 when it melts

Page 21: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

Meanwhile, plate tectonics settles down

• Archean rocks worldwide are of only two types: granite/gneiss complexes (a high-grade metamorphic rock) and intervening greenstones (metamorphosed basalt and some sedimentary rock)

• Superior province in North America is among the biggest in the world

Page 22: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

What does a greenstone belt remind you of?

Page 23: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

But still different than today’s plate tectonics

• Komatiites are ultramafic igneous rocks that are common in the Precambrian but unknown today

• Hotter mantle?• Wetter mantle?• Diamonds!

Page 24: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

First continents form and stick around

Page 25: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

So, by the Proterozoic…

• Division between Archean and Proterozoic is based on oxidizing conditions found in surface waters (1.8 by)

• Tectonics is more similar to today’s; evidence for rifting and subduction and terrane accretion

Page 26: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

What evidence exists for Rodinia?• Grenville orogeny rocks

(sometimes called “mobile belts”), originally defined to explain Canadian shield rocks, were found to exist on many other continents

• All this mountain-building implies some large-scale tectonic event, like a supercontinent (name was suggested in the 1990s)

• Rodinia is constructed at 1.1 by, rifts apart by 0.85 by

Page 27: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

The Grenville orogeny rocks

• Primarily marine sandstones and carbonates (limestones)

• No bioturbation• Since then, these rocks

have been metamorphosed, but the original rock is easily inferred

Page 28: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

Conventional reconstruction

• Line up all the Grenville orogenic belts and create the supercontinent

• Note that Antarctica and the US (Laurentia) are quite separated

Page 29: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

The SWEAT hypothesis• Rodinia joined the

southwest (SW) US (West Texas, specifically) with eastern Antarctica (EAT)

• Shown through lead isotope measurements of similar age rocks that were part of a rift in both areas

• Key point: there was not just one zone of orogeny as in the conventional theory

Page 30: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

Precambrian climate• Positions of continents, especially existence of polar

continents, determines when ice ages occur

Page 31: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

Positive feedback

• If glaciers can build extensively to within 30° of the equator, the extensive ice will reflect a large portion of the Sun’s energy back into space, cooling the surface and allowing more glaciers to grow

• “Icehouse Earth” or “Snowball Earth” hypothesis (W. Brian Harland, Cambridge, 1964)

Page 32: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

How to get out of the Icehouse

• Joe Kirschvink (Caltech, 1992) argued that volcanic activity and carbon dioxide production would not cease even during an Icehouse event, and nothing would “scrub” the carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere, enhancing the greenhouse effect

Page 33: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

More detail about CO2 scrubbing

Page 34: Tectonics and climate of the Precambrian

Life alters as Rodinia breaks up• Ediacaran fauna appears

– first evidence of multicellular life

• No hard parts, preserved as molds

• Unclear if they are truly related to modern phyla, or represent extinct phyla

• Ediacaran period is a recognized division of the Proterozoic eon (630 – 542 my)