The Archean Eon (4000-2500 Ma)

Callan Bentley, Karen Layou, Russ Kohrs, Shelley Jaye, Matt Affolter, and Brian Ricketts and Charlene Estrada

The Archean Eon lasted from 4.0 to 2.5 billion years ago and is named after the Greek word for beginning. This eon represents the beginning of the rock record. Although there is current evidence that rocks and minerals existed during the Hadean Eon, the Archean has a much more robust rock and fossil record.

Sulfur chemistry was vital for early anaerobic life in the Archean eon, over 2.5 billion years ago.

Late Heavy Bombardment

Objects were chaotically flying around at the start of the solar system, building the planets and moons. There is evidence that after the planets formed, about 4.1-3.8 billion years ago, a second large spike of asteroids and comets impacted the Earth and Moon in a late heavy bombardment.  Meteorites and comets in stable or semi-stable orbits became unstable and started impacting objects throughout the solar system. In addition, this event is called the lunar cataclysm because most of the Moons craters are from this event. During the late heavy bombardment, the Earth, Moon, and all planets in the solar system were pummeled by material from the asteroid and Kuiper belts. Evidence of this bombardment was found within samples collected from the Moon.

It is universally accepted that the solar system experienced extensive asteroid and comet bombardment at its start; however, some other process must have caused the second increase in impacts hundreds of millions of years later. A leading theory blames gravitational resonance between Jupiter and Saturn for disturbing orbits within the asteroid and Kuiper belts based on a similar process observed in the Eta Corvi star system.

Origin of the Continents

Earth layers

For plate tectonics to work as it currently, it must have continents. However, the easiest way to create continental material is via assimilation and differentiation of existing continents. This chicken-and-egg quandary over how continents were made in the first place is not easily answered because of the great age of continental material and how much evidence has been lost during tectonics and erosion. While the timing and specific processes are still debated,  volcanic action must have brought the first continental material to the Earth’s surface during the Hadean, 4.4 billion years ago. This model does not solve the problem of continent formation since magmatic differentiation seems to need a thicker crust.

Nevertheless, the continents formed by some incremental process during Earth’s early history. The best idea is that density differences allowed lighter felsic materials to float upward and heavier ultramafic materials and metallic iron to sink. These density differences led to the layering of the Earth, the layers now detected by seismic studies. Early protocontinents accumulated felsic materials as developing plate-tectonic processes brought lighter material from the mantle to the surface.

ocean to ocean collision

The first solid evidence of modern plate tectonics is found at the end of the Archean, indicating at least some continental lithosphere must have been in place. This evidence does not necessarily mark the starting point of plate tectonics; remnants of earlier tectonic activity could have been erased by the rock cycle.

Cratons

The stable interiors of the current continents are called cratons and were mostly formed in the Archean Eon. A craton has two main parts: the shield, crystalline basement rock near the surface, and the platform of sedimentary rocks covering the shield. Most cratons have remained relatively unchanged, with most tectonic activity occurring around cratons instead of within them. Whether created by plate tectonics or another process,  Archean continents gave rise to the  Proterozoic continents that now dominate our planet.

The general guideline for what constitutes a  continent and differentiates oceanic from the continental crust is under some debate. At passive margins,  continental crust grades into the oceanic crust at passive margins, making a distinction difficult. Even island-arc and hot-spot material can seem more closely related to continental crust than oceanic. Continents usually have a  craton in the middle with felsic igneous rocks. There is evidence that submerged masses like Zealandia, which includes present-day New Zealand, would be considered a continent. A Continental crust that does not contain a  craton is called a  continental fragment, such as the island of Madagascar off the east coast of Africa.

Continent of Zealandia

First Life on Earth

microbial mats

Life most likely started during the late Hadean or early Archean Eons. The earliest evidence of life is chemical signatures, microscopic filaments, and microbial mats. Carbon found in 4.1 billion-year-old zircon grains have a chemical signature suggesting an organic origin. Other evidence of early life is 3.8-4.3 billion-year-old microscopic filaments from a  hydrothermal vent deposit in Quebec, Canada. While the chemical and microscopic filaments evidence is not as robust as fossils, there is significant fossil evidence for life 3.5 billion years ago. These first well-preserved fossils are photosynthetic microbial mats, known as stromatolites, found in Australia.

Greenhouse molecules

Although the origin of life on Earth is unknown, hypotheses include a chemical origin in the early atmosphere and ocean, deep-sea hydrothermal vents, and delivery to Earth by comets or other objects. One hypothesis is that life arose from the chemical environment of the Earth’s early atmosphere and oceans, which was very different than today. The oxygen-free atmosphere produced a reducing environment with abundant methane, carbon dioxide, sulfur, and nitrogen compounds. This is what the atmosphere is like on other bodies in the solar system.

Researchers in the famous Miller-Urey experiment simulated early Earth’s atmosphere and lightning within a sealed vessel. After igniting sparks within the vessel, they discovered the formation of amino acids, the fundamental building blocks of proteins. In 1977, when scientists discovered an isolated ecosystem around hydrothermal vents on a deep-sea mid-ocean ridge, it opened the door for another explanation of the origin of life. The hydrothermal vents have a unique ecosystem of critters with chemosynthesis as the foundation of the food chain instead of photosynthesis. The ecosystem derives energy from hot chemical-rich waters pouring out of underground towers. This suggests that life could have started on the deep ocean floor and derived energy from the heat from the Earth’s interior via chemosynthesis. Scientists have since expanded the search for life to more unconventional places, like Jupiter’s icy moon Europa.

Another possibility is that life or its building blocks came to Earth from space, carried aboard comets or other objects. Amino acids, for example, have been found within comets and meteorites. This intriguing possibility also implies a high likelihood of life existing elsewhere in the cosmos.

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Introduction to Historical Geology Copyright © by Chris Johnson; Callan Bentley; Karla Panchuk; Matt Affolter; Karen Layou; Shelley Jaye; Russ Kohrs; Paul Inkenbrandt; Cam Mosher; Brian Ricketts; and Charlene Estrada is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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