4.7 Article

Zircons underestimate mantle depletion of early Earth

Journal

GEOCHIMICA ET COSMOCHIMICA ACTA
Volume 317, Issue -, Pages 538-551

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.gca.2021.11.015

Keywords

Early Earth; Mantle; Hf isotopes; Crustal growth; Eastern Hebei; Caozhuang

Funding

  1. GeoHistory Facility, John de Laeter Centre (Curtin University)
  2. Australian Government via the National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy
  3. Australian Research Council LIEF program [LE150100013]
  4. Australian Microscopy and Microanalysis Research Facility
  5. Australian Science and Industry Endowment Fund
  6. CAS [QYZDY-SSW-DQC017, IGGCAS-201905]
  7. NSFC [41890834, 41890833, 41890832, 41802202]
  8. AuScope

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There is debate regarding the mechanism and timing of crustal growth and differentiation on early Earth. Studies of zircon Hf isotopes suggest the existence of depleted mantle domains during early Earth, but factors such as rock genesis and tectonic background may have hidden the degree of differentiation between ancient crust and mantle.
The mechanism and timing of crustal growth and differentiation on early Earth are debated. Evidence of crustal differentiation is detectable as deviations from Earth's assumed chondritic uniform reservoir (CHUR) as crust is extracted from the mantle leading to a melt-depleted reservoir. For the long-lived zircon Lu-Hf system, no incontrovertible evidence of significant mantle depletion >3.8 Ga exists. We conduct combined U-Pb and Lu-Hf isotopic analyses for the detrital zircon from the Caozhuang supracrustal sequence in North China. The zircon Hf isotopic compositions are broadly scattered along the CHUR evolution line. However, given the possibility of potential systematic biases in zircon petrogenesis and the unique tectonic setting of early Earth, we posit that magmatism controlled by the nascent forms of plate tectonics during the Eoarchean could have likely hidden the degree of ancient crust-mantle differentiation. The non-depleted zircon Hf isotopes observed in North China and globally during early Earth may in verity imply the existence of ubiquitous depleted mantle domains at that time. (c) 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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