Radiogenic Isotopes: The Case for Crustal Recycling on a Near-Steady-State No-Continental-Growth Earth [and Discussion]
Pb, Sr and Nd isotopes define rock ages and residence times in mantle and continental crust, but are not diagnostic of either crustal growth or recycling in a near-steady-state Earth. Constancy of continental freeboard and uniformity of thickness of stable continental crust with age are the only two...
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Published in | Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A: Mathematical, physical, and engineering sciences Vol. 301; no. 1461; p. 443 |
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Main Authors | , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
The Royal Society
15.05.1981
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Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Pb, Sr and Nd isotopes define rock ages and residence times in mantle and continental crust, but are not diagnostic of either
crustal growth or recycling in a near-steady-state Earth. Constancy of continental freeboard and uniformity of thickness of
stable continental crust with age are the only two quantitative measures of crustal volume through time and these imply negligible
crustal growth since 2.9 Ga B.P. Planetary analogies, Pb isotopes, atmospheric evolution, and palaeomagnetism also argue for
early terrestrial differentiation. Rates of crustal growth and recycling are sufficient to reach a near-steady state over
the first 1 Ga of Earth history, before widespread cratonization. Isotope compositions and ages of rocks are quantitatively
compatible with near-steady-state recycling involving multiple complete reworkings of the crust by injection into the mantle
along subduction zones. The recycling process can be observed to occur on the Earth today. Continental crust is uplifted,
reduced in area, and thickened in orogenic belts. It is then subject to erosion, an effective isotopic homogenization process.
A fraction of the sediment flux reaches the ocean floor or accumulates along continental margins, while soluble elements and
water become fixed in ocean crust and trapped in sediments. Subduction of altered ocean crust, sediment, microcontinents and
fragments of basement ripped off the edges of continents completes the process whereby continental crust, enriched in radiogenic
Pb and Sr and with relatively unradiogenic Nd, is returned to the mantle. Pb, Sr and Nd isotopic compositions of igneous rocks
from the mantle are explainable in terms of a near-steady-state model. The mantle buffer dominates observed isotope Sr and
Nd evolutions. Mixing of crust and mantle causes all the isotope evolutions to approximate single-stage growth curves. Isotopic
heterogeneity of the Earth increases as the rate of mixing declines. The observed escape of primordial $^{3}$He from the mantle
is not evidence for continuing continental differentiation or against early differentiation of the Earth. Even if nearly complete
equilibrium chemical differentiation occurred at 4.6 Ga B.P., some $^{3}$He would remain dissolved in the interior and would
escape as recycling continued. A true steady state cannot be achieved because the driving energy declines with time and Earth
surface processes have evolved with development of life and an oxygenated atmosphere. These unidirectional changes, plus variation
in subduction rates and setting and style, and variation in rates of cratonization, provide a complex overprint on the near-steady-state
background of continental evolution. |
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ISSN: | 1364-503X 1471-2962 |
DOI: | 10.1098/rsta.1981.0122 |