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Extraterrestrial factors and their role in the Earth’s tectonic evolution in the Early Precambrian

Authors :
Mikhail I. Kuzmin
M.Z. Glukhovskii
Source :
Russian Geology and Geophysics. 56:959-977
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
GeoScienceWorld, 2015.

Abstract

The paper is focused on the fundamental problem of influence of extraterrestrial factors on the Earth’s geologic and tectonic evolution. Extraterrestrial factors played a decisive role in the Earth’s genesis, the formation of the first Hadean continental crust, and the beginning of the Archean era. Their significant influence persisted in the later epochs: Even in the Phanerozoic, extraterrestrial factors might have had a considerable influence on the environment. The sialic cores of protocontinental crust (4.4–3.9 Ga) with first-generation greenstone zones (3.8–3.2 Ga) and the global system of granite–greenstone belts (3.1–2.7 Ga) formed in the rotation–plume regime, mainly in the subequatorial hot belt. The formation of these global structures was, to a large extent, influenced by asteroid impacts, which caused the impact-triggered genesis of mantle plumes. Dramatic changes in the subsequent geologic history began at 2.7–2.0 Ga; at 2.0 Ga they terminated with the Moon’s transition to an orbit similar to the present-day one (50 ± 3 Earth’s radii), accompanied by the abrupt slowdown of the Earth’s axial rotation, the termination of formation of the layer D″, and the start of recent plate tectonics, which is accompanied by the plume tectonics.

Details

ISSN :
10687971
Volume :
56
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Russian Geology and Geophysics
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........222ba35b69d8bede0a9d430e4aa3899d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rgg.2015.06.001