Saturday, July 19, 2025
https://youtu.be/gJSru5S5IyY
Researchers from Zhejiang University’s School of Earth Sciences—led by Professors Jia Liu and Qunke Xia—have employed an innovative combination of robust zircon mineral data and artificial intelligence to virtually reconstruct Earth’s long‑lost Hadean continental crust, dating back approximately 4.4 billion years . As physical rock records from that era have been obliterated by intense geologic activity, access to this ancient world has been limited to zircon crystals found in places like Australia’s Jack Hills. Using over 14,000 individual zircon specimens and 823 associated rock samples, the team trained machine‑learning models to correlate trace‑element signatures in zircons with the chemical compositions of their parent magmas. This method effectively resurrects the characteristics of crust that no longer exists in its original form.
The study’s results suggest that even at such an early stage, Earth’s crust may have been shaped by processes similar to modern plate tectonics—specifically convergent tectonic activity, akin to continental collisions—rather than simple oceanic subduction. This finding pushes the known rock record back by nearly 400 million years, offering a powerful glimpse into the planet’s infancy. Moreover, this AI‑zoned approach underscores the potential for deepening our understanding of the earliest continental crust and provides a promising new route for examining Earth’s formative “missing chapters.”
P. Geo. Ricardo A Valls, M. Sc. and Geo Gadfly
Valls Geoconsultant
ORCID ID- https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5421-0914
Scopus Author ID: 7003369619/35335510700
ResearcherID: S-6604-2018
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