• Re: Old zircons

    From Burkhard@21:1/5 to erik simpson on Tue May 14 16:01:45 2024
    erik simpson wrote:

    Ancient crystals suggest early Earth had land and freshwater

    "The zircons represent a rare report from the mysterious Hadean, the geological time period that ended about 4 billion years ago, 500 million years after Earth’s formation. The planet, originally a ball of magma,
    had cooled off and formed a crust. Somehow, perhaps from a bombardment
    of water-rich asteroids, it had accumulated a global ocean. Earth may
    have remained watery for quite some time—at least until tectonic
    processes began to recycle Earth’s crust into its interior, and magma bubbled up in chains of island volcanoes that eventually fused into continents.

    Much of this is guesswork, because almost no rock survives from the
    Hadean. The oldest rock with a reliable age—a gneiss from Canada—is 4.03 billion years old. The only surviving material from before then are
    zircons, found embedded in younger rock, which are as much as 4.4
    billion years old. “Just about any information that we can get from
    these Hadean zircons is useful because it’s our singular record of the Earth’s first 500 million years,” says geologist Stephen Mojzsis of the HUN-REN Research Centre for Astronomy and Earth Sciences."

    https://www.science.org/content/article/ancient-crystals-suggest-early-earth-had-land-and-freshwater

    very interesting, thanks! The only thing I know about zircon is
    something about its etymology - a rare example of a doublette.
    "Jagoon" in English is both a type of zircon, and also a term for
    fake jewelry sold as genuine. It came to English via French "jargon",
    which got it from Italian giargone, which got it from Persian
    "zarqūn". The same Persian word was used by the German mineralogist
    Abraham Gottlob Werner to create "Zirkon" and "Zirkonium", which then
    also made its way into English (and lots of other languages).

    Weber was the father of German geology (and honorary fellow
    of the Royal Society of Edinburgh...)and had developed an early theory
    about the stratification of the Earth's crust - also a promotor of the now obsolete Neptunian theory. To link this with another thread, he was
    also a sort of Linnaeus for mineralogy and developed a comprehensive
    system how to identify and classify them. As a side result, he also
    developed his own color nomenclature, that matched colors with specimen
    from flora, fauna and minerals. It was massively influential also among artists, especially when in 1814, the Scottish painter Patrick Syme
    published an amended translation as "Werner's Nomenclature of Colours"
    in Edinburgh. A certain Charles Darwin read it as a student here, who
    was deeply impressed and used it later extensively in his notes and
    reports.

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