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NASA scientists confirm liquid water on early Earth (Forwarded)



 
 
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Old June 11th 05, 05:45 PM
Andrew Yee
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Default NASA scientists confirm liquid water on early Earth (Forwarded)

Nicholas A. Veronico/Michael Mewhinney June 3, 2005
Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif,
Phone: 650/604-1939, 650/604-9000
E-mail:

NEWS RELEASE: 05-35

NASA SCIENTISTS CONFIRM LIQUID WATER ON EARLY EARTH

Research funded partly by NASA has confirmed the existence of liquid
water on the Earth's surface more than 4 billion years ago.

Scientists have found that the Earth had formed patterns of crust
formation, erosion and sediment recycling as early as 4.35 billion
years ago. Their findings came during a study of zircon crystals
formed during the earliest period of Earth's history, the Hadean Eon
(4.5 billion to 4.0 billion years ago).

"NASA is interested in how early the Earth had abundant liquid water.
If oceans form early in a planet's history, then so can life," said
Carl Pilcher, senior scientist for astrobiology at NASA Headquarters,
Washington. "Learning how early oceans formed on Earth will help us
understand where else oceans and perhaps even life may have formed in
this solar system and in planetary systems around other stars."

"This work provides direct evidence that the Earth was probably
habitable within a hundred million years of its formation," said
Bruce Runnegar, director of the NASA Astrobiology Institute (NAI) at
NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif., which provided some
of the study's funding.

Published in the May 6, 2005, edition of Science, the research was
conducted by T. Mark Harrison of the Research School of Earth
Sciences, Australian National University, Canberra and the University
of California, Los Angeles; and E. Bruce Watson of the Department of
Earth & Environmental Sciences at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute,
Troy, N.Y. Field research was completed in Western Australia's Jack
Hills, which preserve a record of the Hadean Eon.

Watson and Harrison devised a new method of determining the
temperatures at which the rocks formed. The team extracted and
examined more than 50,000 zircons, crystals about the width of a
human hair, which have been exposed through natural erosion in the
Jack Hills. From the 50,000 zircons, only a couple of hundred were
older than 4.2 billion years. Measuring the temperature at which the
rocks melt gives an indication of the conditions in which they formed.

"Rocks formed as a result of the thermal energy from meteorite
impacts would be bone dry and melt at greater than 900 degrees
Celsius," said Harrison. "In contrast, our study has found that
Hadean rocks melted at a consistent average temperature of 690
degrees Celsius. Water, which is a very powerful catalyst, must have
been present in very large amounts for rocks to melt at such a
relatively low temperature."

This discovery supports the proposal by Harrison's group four years
earlier that a heavy oxygen isotope signature in the Hadean zircons
is evidence for liquid water at or near the Earth's surface by 4.3
billion years ago.

The NAI, founded in 1997, is a partnership between NASA, 16 major
U.S. teams and five international consortia. NAI's goal is to
promote, conduct and lead integrated multidisciplinary astrobiology
research and to train a new generation of astrobiology researchers.

For more information about the NAI on the Internet, visit:
http://nai.arc.nasa.gov

For information about NASA and agency programs on the Internet, visit:
http://www.nasa.gov

 




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