Ages in the range 3.6-4.0 Ga (billion years) have been reported for the oldest, continental, granitoid orthogneisses, whose magmatic precursors were probably formed by partial melting or differentiation from a mafic, mantle-derived source. The geological interpretation of some of the oldest ages in this range is still strongly disputed. The oldest known supracrustal (i.e. volcanic and sedimentary) rocks, with an age of 3.7-3.8 Ga, occur in West Greenland. They were deposited in water, and several of the sediments contain C-13-depleted graphite microparticles, which have been claimed to be biogenic. Ancient sediments (c. 3 Ga) in western Australia contain much older detrital zircons with dates ranging up to 4.4 Ga. The nature and origin of t...
International audienceDating the oldest terrestrial rocks and minerals allows constraining the age a...
The geochronological evolution of early Archaean Amitsoq gneisses from southern West Greenland is re...
International audienceRecycling of crust into the mantle has left only small remnants at Earth’s sur...
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...
At greater than 3.7 Gyr, Earth's oldest known supracrustal rocks, comprised dominantly of mafic igne...
Investigations conducted over the last three decades on Hadean zircon from the Jack Hills, Western A...
There are few unresolved questions in the Earth Sciences which generate as much debate as the nature...
At this time the oldest rocks on Earth occur in W. Greenland. Radioactive dating methods give ages o...
The rapid change in (207)pb/(206)pb ratio during early Earth history provides a powerful constraint ...
Remnants of Early Archaean rocks (>FX3000 m.y. old) are reported from most continents. A critical re...
Two recent papers [1, 2] report geological, geochemical, and geochronological data from the early Ar...
International audienceDating the oldest terrestrial rocks and minerals allows constraining the age a...
The geochronological evolution of early Archaean Amitsoq gneisses from southern West Greenland is re...
International audienceRecycling of crust into the mantle has left only small remnants at Earth’s sur...
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...
At greater than 3.7 Gyr, Earth's oldest known supracrustal rocks, comprised dominantly of mafic igne...
Investigations conducted over the last three decades on Hadean zircon from the Jack Hills, Western A...
There are few unresolved questions in the Earth Sciences which generate as much debate as the nature...
At this time the oldest rocks on Earth occur in W. Greenland. Radioactive dating methods give ages o...
The rapid change in (207)pb/(206)pb ratio during early Earth history provides a powerful constraint ...
Remnants of Early Archaean rocks (>FX3000 m.y. old) are reported from most continents. A critical re...
Two recent papers [1, 2] report geological, geochemical, and geochronological data from the early Ar...
International audienceDating the oldest terrestrial rocks and minerals allows constraining the age a...
The geochronological evolution of early Archaean Amitsoq gneisses from southern West Greenland is re...
International audienceRecycling of crust into the mantle has left only small remnants at Earth’s sur...