4.7 Article

Lithium in Jack Hills zircons: Evidence for extensive weathering of Earth's earliest crust

Journal

EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
Volume 272, Issue 3-4, Pages 666-676

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.epsl.2008.05.032

Keywords

zircon; Jack Hills; lithium; weathering; continental crust; Hadean

Funding

  1. NSF [EAR 0319230, EAR 0509639]
  2. DoE [93ER14389]
  3. NASA Astrobiology Institute [N07-5489]

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In situ Li analyses of 4348 to 3362 Ma detrital zircons from the Jack Hills, Western Australia by SIMS reveal that the Li abundances (typically 10 to 60 ppm) are commonly over 10,000 times higher than in zircons crystallized from mantle-derived magmas and in mantle-derived zircon megacrysts (typically < 2 ppb). High Li concentrations in zircons (10 to 250 ppm) have also been found in igneous zircons from three continental parent rocks: granites, Li-rich pegmatites, and migmatites in pelitic metasediment. The substitution of trivalent cations (REEs and Y) in zircon correlates with Li+1 and P+5, suggesting that an interstitial site for Li, as well as the xenotime Substitution for R provides charge balance for REEs. Li is thus fixed in the zircon Structure by Coupled substitutions, and diffusive changes in [Li] composition are rate-limited by slow diffusion of REEs. The Jack Hills zircons also have fractionated lithium isotope ratios (delta Li-7=-19 to+ 13 parts per thousand) about five times more variable than those recorded in primitive ocean floor basalts (2 to 8 parts per thousand), but similar to continental crust and its weathering products. Values of delta Li-7 below -10 parts per thousand are found in zircons that formed as early as 4300 Ma. The high Li compositions indicate that primitive magmas were not the source of Jack Hills zircons and the fractionated values of delta Li-7 suggest that highly weathered regolith was sampled by these early Archean magmas. These new Li data provide evidence that the Parent magmas of ancient Zircons from Jack Hills incorporated materials from the surface of the Earth that interacted at low temperature with liquid water. These data Support the hypothesis that continental-type crust and oceans existed by 4300 Ma, within 250 million years of the formation of Earth and the low values of delta Li-7 suggest that weathering was extensive in the early Archean. (c) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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