A recent claim to have found traces of Earth's earliest life (>3.95 Ga) utilising isotopically light carbon in graphite-bearing metapelites from the Saglek Block of northern Labrador, Canada, is re-evaluated applying rigorous geological and geochronological criteria. The establishment of these criteria in previous evaluations of early life claims from southern West Greenland and northern Canada is reviewed in order to provide a backdrop to discussion of the Saglek claim. In particular, we emphasise the importance of the scale of lithological continuity in determining the veracity of such claims, which are considerably easier to demonstrate from large, relatively less tectonised supracrustal remnants like the Isua Greenstone Belt than the...
The rapid change in (207)pb/(206)pb ratio during early Earth history provides a powerful constraint ...
International audienceGraphite, interpreted as altered bioorganic matter in an early Archean, ca. 3....
The Saglek Block of Labrador comprises Eoarchean to Neoarchean lithologies, metamorphosed at high te...
A recent claim to have found traces of Earth’s earliest life (>3.95 Ga) utilising isotopically li...
A recent claim to have found traces of Earth’s earliest life (> 3.95 Ga) utilising isotopically ligh...
At greater than 3.7 Gyr, Earth's oldest known supracrustal rocks, comprised dominantly of mafic igne...
Understanding Earth's early evolution requires decoding the cryptic geological record that is preser...
Two recent papers [1, 2] report geological, geochemical, and geochronological data from the early Ar...
There are few unresolved questions in the Earth Sciences which generate as much debate as the nature...
The Archean continental crusts account for ca. 20% of the present volume, but the thermal history of...
Biological activity is a major factor in Earth\u27s chemical cycles, including facilitating CO2 sequ...
International audienceThe Saglek-Hebron Complex (SHC) located in Northern Labrador, Canada, includes...
Ages in the range 3.6-4.0 Ga (billion years) have been reported for the oldest, continental, granito...
Ages in the range 3.6-4.0 Ga (billion years) have been reported for the oldest, continental, granito...
The Palaeoarchean supracrustal belts in Greenland contain Earth’s oldest rocks and are a prime targe...
The rapid change in (207)pb/(206)pb ratio during early Earth history provides a powerful constraint ...
International audienceGraphite, interpreted as altered bioorganic matter in an early Archean, ca. 3....
The Saglek Block of Labrador comprises Eoarchean to Neoarchean lithologies, metamorphosed at high te...
A recent claim to have found traces of Earth’s earliest life (>3.95 Ga) utilising isotopically li...
A recent claim to have found traces of Earth’s earliest life (> 3.95 Ga) utilising isotopically ligh...
At greater than 3.7 Gyr, Earth's oldest known supracrustal rocks, comprised dominantly of mafic igne...
Understanding Earth's early evolution requires decoding the cryptic geological record that is preser...
Two recent papers [1, 2] report geological, geochemical, and geochronological data from the early Ar...
There are few unresolved questions in the Earth Sciences which generate as much debate as the nature...
The Archean continental crusts account for ca. 20% of the present volume, but the thermal history of...
Biological activity is a major factor in Earth\u27s chemical cycles, including facilitating CO2 sequ...
International audienceThe Saglek-Hebron Complex (SHC) located in Northern Labrador, Canada, includes...
Ages in the range 3.6-4.0 Ga (billion years) have been reported for the oldest, continental, granito...
Ages in the range 3.6-4.0 Ga (billion years) have been reported for the oldest, continental, granito...
The Palaeoarchean supracrustal belts in Greenland contain Earth’s oldest rocks and are a prime targe...
The rapid change in (207)pb/(206)pb ratio during early Earth history provides a powerful constraint ...
International audienceGraphite, interpreted as altered bioorganic matter in an early Archean, ca. 3....
The Saglek Block of Labrador comprises Eoarchean to Neoarchean lithologies, metamorphosed at high te...