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The Precambrian Record

The Precambrian Record. Key Events of Precambrian time. Acasta Gneiss is dated at 3.96 bya. It is near Yellowknife Lake , NWT Canada Zircons possibly a bit older in Australia. Precambrian 4.6 billion years to, say, 548 or 544 million years (depending on method).

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The Precambrian Record

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  1. The Precambrian Record

  2. Key Events of Precambrian time Acasta Gneiss is dated at 3.96 bya. It is near Yellowknife Lake , NWT Canada Zircons possibly a bit older in Australia

  3. Precambrian • 4.6 billion years to, say, 548 or 544 million years (depending on method). • Represents 88% of all of the history of the earth. • Referred to as the Cryptozoic Eon. • “hidden life” (no more BIFs) (prokaryotes)

  4. EarlyHadean Highlights 1 • Earth formed about 4.6 billion years ago from coalescing interstellar dust. • Earth was bombarded by large planetesimals  adding to earth’s mass (adds heat) • Hot spinning pre-earth mass melted, caused differentiation of materials according to density. • Distinct earth layers begin to form • Dense iron and nickel migrate to center (core) • silicate material moves out to mantle

  5. EarlyHadean Highlights 2 • Huge impact from a Mars-sized planetessimal created the moon. • Caused earth to spin faster. • Possible Tilt change • Moon controls earth’s spin and creates tidal forces. • Moon’s orbit at an angle to planets around Sun • Earth got most of the core – outer part molten. Earth rotates. We have magnetic field and, therefore, an atmosphere

  6. Moon Origin hypotheses -1 Speed and approach angle unlikely

  7. Moon Origin hypotheses - 2 Chemical composition of the Moon suggests that it could not have co-formed with the earth.

  8. Moon Origin hypotheses - 3

  9. PrecambrianEarly Atmosphere • First earth atmosphere H He lost to solar wind. No magnetic field • Early permanent earth atmosphere mostly Nitrogen (inert) and CO2 Post-differentiationstart of liquid core dynamo • Liquid water is required to remove CO2 from atmosphere. • Mars is too cold to have liquid water. • Venus is too hot to have liquid water. • So both have CO2 atmospheres. • On Earth, most of the world’s CO2was converted to O2 by photosynthesis. • Enough by 2.0 bya to sustain life. • CO2 is locked up in life, limestones, dolomites. Mars Venus Earth

  10. Early Permanent Atmosphere • Gasses from cooling magmas formed early atmosphere mostly N2, CO2, with CH4, H2O • Early earth not conducive to modern oxygen breathing organisms: too much solar UV gets through atmosphere. • Little oxygen occurred in the atmosphere until the evolution of photosynthetic organisms (Eubacteria) 3.5 billion years ago. Fully oxygenated about 1.9 billion years ago.

  11. PrecambrianEarly Oceans from 4 bya • Much water vapor from volcanic degassing. • Salt in oceans is derived from weathering and carried to the oceans by rivers. • Blood of most animals has chemistry of seawater. • Part of the earth’s water probably came from comets. • Comets are literally large dirty snowballs. • Provide fresh water. OCEANS

  12. Archean To Proterozoic Sedimentary Rocks • Archean • 4 bya: mostly deep water clastic deposits such as mudstones and muddy sandstones. • high concentration of eroded volcanic minerals (Sandstones called Graywackes). • 3 bya: absence of shallow water shelf carbonates. • increasing chert. • low oxygen levels, free iron was much more common in the Archean. • Iron formed “chemical sinks” that consumed much of the early planetary oxygen. • Formed banded ironstones, commonly with interbedded chert. • Proterozoic– 2 bya Carbonates* become important *Franklin Marble Field Trip 1 - Non-marine sediments turn red – iron is oxidized by the oxygen in AIR

  13. Precambrian Hadean • Formation of Continents • Early earth surface was magma sea, gradually cooled to form the crust. • Continents did not always exist but grew from the chemical differentiation of early, mafic magmas in the young hot earth. Floating “Volcanic Islands” of less dense higher silica magmas.

  14. Precambrian Hadean and Archean • Formation of Felsic Islands • Convection was fast due high temperatures – ultramafic magma • Partial Melting of base of Ultramafic Islands, OR • Fractional Crystallization of Mafic Magmas THEN • Once both mafic and felsic rocks (with different densities) exist, subduction under protocontinents possible. • Water squeezed from subducted ocean materials partially melts mantle • Volcanic arcs add land to protocontinents. • Increasing amounts of Felsic continental material

  15. First continental crust At high temperatures, only Olivine and Ca-Plagioclase crystallize “Komatiite” Then: First Water out Komatiite partially melts, Basalt gets to surface, piles up. The stack sinks, partially melts when pressure high enough. Fractionation makes increasingly silica-rich magmas Density differencesallow subduction of mafic rocks. Further partial melting and fractionation makes higher silica melt that won’t subduct

  16. Archean: Growth of the early continents Magmatism from Subduction Zones causes thickening

  17. Growth of the early continents Island Arcs and other terranes accrete as intervening ocean crust is subducted Little Archean ocean crust survives: most subducted But silica-rich continental crust too buoyant to subduct.

  18. Growth of the early continents Sediments extend continental materials seaward Quartz sand becomes SS or quartzite, too buoyant to subduct

  19. Growth of the early continents • Continent-Continent collisions result in larger continents • Again, not very big in Archean; convection cells too small

  20. Archean-Age Surface Rocks

  21. PrecambrianEarly Continents (Cratons) Archean • Archean cratons consist of regions of light-colored felsic rock (granulite gneisses) • surrounded by pods of dark-colored greenstone (chlorite-rich metamorphic rocks). • Pilbara Shield, Australia • Canadian Shield • South African Shield. Chlorite is the Low T metamorphic product of clay muds. Mafic Greenstone Belts Felsic Islands 40km

  22. Archean Crustal Provinces were once separatedCanadian Shield assembled from small cratons Discussion: Where to look for diamonds Intensely folded rocks where cratons were later sutured together in Early Proterozoic Longest: Trans-Hudson Orogen

  23. Granulite gneiss and greenstone Canadian Shield Exposed by Pleistocene glaciers

  24. Stratigraphic Sequence of a Greenstone belt Banded Iron Formations Younger lavas richer in silica Increasingly Silica-rich extrusives, some rhyolites with granites below them. Komatiites form at very high temps. They are absent later as Earth cooled DEMO: Banded Iron Sample

  25. Archean Formation of greenstone belts • Early continents formed by collision of felsic proto-continents. • Greenstone belts represent volcanic rocks and sediments that accumulated • along and above subduction zones and then were sutured to the protocontinents during collisions. • Protocontinents small, rapid convection breaks them up

  26. Proterozoic Tectonics: The Wilson Cycle • Proterozoic – Convection Slows • Rift Phase • Coarse border, valley and lava rocks in normal faulted basins • Drift Phase • Passive margin sediments • Collision Phase • Subduction of ocean floor, island arcs form • Then collision

  27. Crustal provinces: Proterozoic Tectonics Slave Craton Rift and Drift Followed by Wopmay Orogen: remnants of old collisional mountains Intensely folded rocks where cratons were sutured together in Early Proterozoic

  28. Wilson Cycle 1&2 Rift & DriftCoronation Supergroup 1. Rift 2. Passive Margin sediments Much later stuff 1. Rift Valley Proterozoic 2 bya as Slave craton pulled apart

  29. Near-collision phase of the Wilson Cycle in the Wopmay Orogen

  30. 3. End of Wilson cycle in the Wopmay Orogeny Coronation Supergroup thrust faulted eastward over Slave Craton Note the vertical exaggeration

  31. Key Events of Precambrian time

  32. Proterozoic Assembly of Laurentia • Trans-Hudson Orogen mostly 2.5 - 2 bya • Superior, Wyoming, Hearne plates sutured • Mountain range now eroded away • Greenland, N. Gr. Brit., Scandinavia by 1.8 bya • Continued accretion 1.8-1.6 bya of island arcs. Most of S. US “Mazatzal Province” • Last piece “Grenville Orogeny” 1.3-1 bya • Assembly of Rodinia by about 750 mya

  33. Proterozoic Oxygen - Rich Atmosphere • Eubacteria are photosynthetic 2 bya formed stromatolites along shores • Free oxygen in atmosphere • Band Iron Formations (common 3.8 – 2 bya) become rare, probably depended on disappearing conditions • 2 bya Redbeds begin forming when iron in freshwater sediment is exposed to abundant atmosphere oxygen • Oxygen in atmosphere irradiated - Ozone layer forms, protecting shallow water and land life forms from UV

  34. First Redbeds

  35. Key Events of Precambrian time

  36. Final Assembly of RodiniaGrenville Orogeny 1.3 – 1.0 BYA • Eastern US Grenville collided with west coast of S.America (maybe) • We saw this Field Trip 1, Volcanic Arc at Park n Ride • Southwest US collided w/ Antarctica • Grenville Orogeny continues in Antarctica • South collided with Africa • Rifted apart by about 600 mya, after time of “Snowball Earth”

  37. Growth of Laurentia Grenville: Shallow Water sandstones (lots of graywacke), mudstones and carbonates subjected to high-grade metamorphism and igneous intrusion

  38. Some workers think our local Grenville Collider was NW S. America

  39. Proterozoic Rifting • Grenville Time Rifting 1.3 – 1 bya • Kansas to Ontario to Ohio • Rift Valley sediments and lavas 15 km (9 miles) thick! • Rich in Copper, as are the rift valley sediments here. • Why?

  40. Midcontinent rift 1500 km long, exposed near L. Superior

  41. Key Events of Precambrian time

  42. Plenty of highlands, equator to poles What Plate Tectonic conditions favor glaciation? Grenville Orogen

  43. Snowball Earth • Rodinia: abundant basalts with easily weathered Ca feldspars. Ocean gets Ca+ + . CO2 tied up in extensive limestones. Less greenhouse effect. Atmosphere can’t trap heat – Earth gets colder • Grenville Orogeny left extensive highlands • From high latitudes to equator • About 635 mya glacial deposits found in low latitudes and elevations • Huge Ice sheet reflects solar radiation “Albedo” • Some workers believe oceans froze

  44. Stable isotopes of C and O d13C and d18O:3 - 4 Proterozoic Glaciations Earth surface became cold enough to produce glaciations and ice ages G - Glaciation BIF - Banded Iron Formation Cambrian Snow-ball Earth

  45. Break up of Rodinia • Hypothesis: Ice an insulator, heat builds up • Heavy volcanic activity poured CO2 into atmosphere – greenhouse effect • Warming melted snowball earth

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