First reported by Phys
Ancient rocks reveal how water reshaped Earth's interior 3.1 billion years ago
3.1 billion‑year‑old rocks in Australia reveal a forgotten chapter of Earth’s water cycle
From the article
Ancient 3.1 billion‑year‑old rocks in Australia are offering scientists a rare glimpse into a long‑lost chapter of Earth’s water cycle, revealing how early oceans and crust interacted, reshaping theories about our planet’s formation, climate evolution, and the conditions that made life possible.
Continue reading on downtoearth.org.inYou might also wanna read
3.1-billion-year-old pillow basalts in Australia's Pilbara Craton reveal ancient water cycle evidence
A first-person account of visiting the Pilbara Craton in Western Australia, where 3.1 billion-year-old pillow basalts reveal evidence of Ear
theconversation.com·1d agoAncient rocks reveal how water reshaped Earth's interior 3.1 billion years ago
Phys·2d ago
Study claims 3-billion-year-old Australian crater is Earth's oldest impact structure, but age disputed
A study claims that the North Pole Dome crater (Miralga impact structure) in Western Australia was created by an asteroid strike 3 billion y
How shifting ocean pathways and continental shapes may have changed Earth's ice age cycles
The article explores how changes in ocean circulation pathways, driven by continental shifts, have triggered major climate changes in Earth'
Oldest known asteroid impact on Earth dated to 3 billion years
phys.org·14d ago
Underwater volcano off Madagascar spews magma containing 4.5-billion-year-old traces of Earth's primordial magma ocean
Scientists have discovered that a young underwater volcano off the coast of Madagascar is spewing magma containing chemical traces of Earth'

Comments
Sign in to join the conversation.
No comments yet. Be the first.