Iron-rich rocks reveal fresh information about Earth's planetary history: Study
Banded iron formations, sedimentary rocks that may have caused some of the biggest volcanic eruptions in Earth's history, contain visually spectacular layers of burned orange, yellow, silver, brown, and blue-tinged black colours, according to a new study. Read further on Dynamite News:
Washington: Banded iron formations, sedimentary rocks that may have caused some of the biggest volcanic eruptions in Earth's history, contain visually spectacular layers of burned orange, yellow, silver, brown, and blue-tinged black colours, according to a new study.
These rocks contain iron oxides that sank to the bottom of oceans long ago, forming dense layers that eventually turned to stone. The study published this week in Nature Geoscience suggests the iron-rich layers could connect ancient changes at Earth's surface -- like the emergence of photosynthetic life -- to planetary processes like volcanism and plate tectonics.
In addition to linking planetary processes that were generally thought to be unconnected, the study could reframe scientists' understanding of Earth's early history and provide insight into processes that could produce habitable exoplanets far from our solar system.
"These rocks tell -- quite literally -- the story of a changing planetary environment," said Duncan Keller, the study's lead author and a postdoctoral researcher in Rice's Department of Earth, Environmental and Planetary Sciences. "They embody a change in the atmospheric and ocean chemistry."
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Banded iron formations are chemical sediments precipitated directly from ancient seawater rich in dissolved iron. Metabolic actions of microorganisms, including photosynthesis, are thought to have facilitated the precipitation of the minerals, which formed layer upon layer over time along with chert (microcrystalline silicon dioxide). The largest deposits formed as oxygen accumulated in Earth's atmosphere about 2.5 billion years ago.
"These rocks formed in the ancient oceans, and we know that those oceans were later closed up laterally by plate tectonic processes," Keller explained. The mantle, though solid, flows like a fluid at about the rate that fingernails grow. Tectonic plates -- continent-sized sections of the crust and uppermost mantle -- are constantly on the move, largely as a result of thermal convection currents in the mantle. Earth's tectonic processes control the life cycles of oceans.
"Just like the Pacific Ocean is being closed today -- it's subducting under Japan and under South America -- ancient ocean basins were destroyed tectonically," he said. "These rocks either had to get pushed up onto continents and be preserved -- and we do see some preserved, that's where the ones we're looking at today come from -- or subducted into the mantle."
Because of their high iron content, banded iron formations are denser than the mantle, which made Keller wonder whether subducted chunks of the formations sank all the way down and settled in the lowest region of the mantle near the top of Earth's core. There, under immense temperature and pressure, they would have undergone profound changes as their minerals took on different structures.
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"There's some very interesting work on the properties of iron oxides at those conditions," Keller said. "They can become highly thermally and electrically conductive. Some of them transfer heat as easily as metals do. So it's possible that, once in the lower mantle, these rocks would turn into extremely conductive lumps like hot plates."
Keller and his co-workers posit that regions enriched in subducted iron formations might aid the formation of mantle plumes, rising conduits of hot rock above thermal anomalies in the lower mantle that can produce enormous volcanoes like the ones that formed the Hawaiian Islands. "Underneath Hawaii, seismological data show us a hot conduit of upwelling mantle," Keller said. "Imagine a hot spot on your stove burner. As the water in your pot is boiling, you'll see more bubbles over a column of rising water in that area. Mantle plumes are sort of a giant version of that."
"We looked at the depositional ages of banded iron formations and the ages of large basaltic eruption events called large igneous provinces, and we found that there's a correlation," Keller said. "Many of the igneous events -- which were so massive that the 10 or 15 largest may have been enough to resurface the entire planet -- were preceded by banded iron formation deposition at intervals of roughly 241 million years, give or take 15 million. It's a strong correlation with a mechanism that makes sense."
The study showed that there was a plausible length of time for banded iron formations to first be drawn deep into the lower mantle and to then influence heat flow to drive a plume toward Earth's surface thousands of kilometres above. (ANI)