Figure
1. Artist’s
impression of Earth during the Hadean aeon, when bombardment by asteroids and
comets was frequent. Image credit: BBC
------------------------
The Earth is 4.55 billion years old, but microbial life is not
attested until about 3.8 billion years ago. What was happening between those
two milestones, during the period known as the Hadean? The very name derives
from Hades, evoking a hellish environment with constant asteroid strikes and blazing
lava flows. Yet an
earlier posting on this blog reported studies arguing for more benign conditions
in this aeon.
Both Arndt & Nisbet (2012) and Abramov & Mojzsis (2009) have argued that the Earth had cool seas and landmasses during the later Hadean. Thereafter came the Late Heavy Bombardment, a dynamical instability in the outer Solar System that created a system-wide storm of asteroids and comets. Their impact scars are still visible on the surface of the Moon, Mars, and Mercury. Nevertheless, according to several studies, none of the asteroid strikes were sufficient to boil off the global ocean or sterilize the entire crust. Arndt & Nisbet even offered a figure to illustrate this appealing revision of Earth history.
Figure 2. The first figure in Arndt & Nisbet’s 2012 review of life on the young Earth. Panel a is a detail of a painting by Chesley Bonestell, a noted space artist of the mid-twentieth century.
Figure
3.
The painting by Bonestell, shown above left, was featured on the cover of Life Magazine (with a horizontal flip) in
1952. The glowing sphere on the horizon is the newborn Moon.
The Hadean cataclysms gave way to the Late Heavy
Bombardment, the final major episode of resurfacing for our Moon, and by
extension the final major asteroid catastrophe for Earth. Most studies over the
past twenty-odd years have characterized this epoch as a relatively brief spike
in impacts around 3.9 Gya (e.g., Ryder 1990, Hand 2008). However, Marchi’s
group places its onset around 4.1 Gya and argues that, rather than a single
spike, both large and small impacts continued intermittently for hundreds of
millions of years. Even the small impacts in this new model were on the scale of
the Chicxulub event (popularly known as the Dinosaur Killer). In this picture,
the Earth had no long-lasting geological peace until well into the Archean.
Figure 4. Basic timeline of
Earth history
from cruel to kind
and back again: evolving views of the hadean
Before the Apollo mission of the later twentieth century,
scientific views of Earth’s infancy were simple. Having coalesced out of crashing
planetesimals, the newborn planet radiated heat until it cooled enough to
support oceans and continents. Thereafter life evolved, most likely in the sea,
and eventually colonized the land. (Continental drift and plate tectonics were
still crackpot ideas in the 1960s.)
Given these assumptions, analyses of Moon rocks collected by
the Apollo astronauts brought a big surprise. Isotopic dating indicated that
the Moon was completely resurfaced by asteroid strikes around 3.8 Gya. Whatever
bombardment the Moon suffered must have been even worse on Earth, a much larger
and more gravitationally attractive target. The simple picture of a steadily
cooling planet had to be discarded. At least two replacements are available: 1)
after the Earth formed, asteroid impacts steadily declined over half a billion
years, then climaxed in an intense but brief bombardment, or 2) an irregular
but unrelenting rain of impactors battered the Earth until the outer planets
settled into stable orbits, and then the storm concluded with a final roar, or maybe
just a slow retreat.
The first alternative has been widely endorsed; Morbidelli
et al. 2012b provide a summary of perspectives since the 1970s. Several
publications over the past few decades present a consistently benign view of the
Hadean (Ryder 1990, 2002; Gomes et al. 2005; Hand 2008; Arndt & Nisbet 2012).
Between 4.4 and 4.0 Gya, according to these studies, impacts were infrequent
and the global environment was probably friendly to the emergence of life. A more
cataclysmic bombardment began around 3.9 Gya, but even then the flux of
impactors was “comparatively benign” (Ryder 2002), lasting only about 80
million years. This bombardment was insufficient to boil off the oceans or
sterilize the crust. Thus life could have evolved at any point after 4.4 Gya,
and once it did, it would likely survive all subsequent bombardments.
A seminal study by Gomes and colleagues (2005) wove the
lunar cataclysm into the dynamical history proposed by the Nice model of Solar
System formation. At the time of publication, all four authors were associated
with the Observatoire de la Côte d’ Azur in Nice. Using numerical simulations,
they argued that Jupiter and Saturn migrated into wider orbits during the
Hadean, ultimately triggering a gravitational instability in the outer system.
Objects from the Kuiper belt beyond Neptune and the asteroid belt inside
Jupiter’s orbit were scattered into the inner Solar System, producing the Late
Heavy Bombardment. The Nice group placed the peak of this event around 3.8 Gya
and estimated its duration between 30 and 150 million years. From beginning to
end, this instability depleted the asteroid belt by a factor of 10.
In 2011, the same group – now augmented by David Nesvorny –
presented a revised version of the model, which they dubbed Nice II (Levison et
al. 2011). Although it changes the initial orbital configuration of the outer
Solar System, Nice II retains a similar timeline for the gravitational instability
of the giant planets, as well as for the Late Heavy Bombardment.
Nonetheless, in the same year, Morbidelli and Nesvorny
contributed to another study of the Late Heavy Bombardment that offered a very
different perspective on this event (Bottke et al. 2011). The bombardment was
no longer a brief spike but an extended cataclysm that continued throughout the
Archean aeon. A key element in this new model was a putative extension of the
classical asteroid belt – dubbed the “E-belt” – millions of kilometers inward to
the vicinity of Mars. This E-belt was proposed as the source of the impactors
that resurfaced the Earth and Moon. With successive revisions, including the
addition of Simone Marchi to the author group (Bottke et al. 2011; Bottke et
al. 2012a, 2012b; Morbidelli et al. 2012a, 2012b), this model developed into
the headline-grabber just published in Nature.
time’s toothy saw
In place of a curve or spike, Morbidelli’s group offers a
saw – more specifically, a sawtooth-shaped timeline in which impacts were
intermittent, rarely cataclysmic, and progressively milder. In 2012, they presented
this summary:
“In our sawtooth view, big impactors hit over an extended
period, with more lulls and therefore more opportunities for the Hadean-era
biosphere to recover.” (Morbidelli et al. 2012b) “Life might have formed early
in the Earth’s history and survived from that time.” (Morbidelli et al. 2012a).
Two years later, though, their perspective has become less
sanguine. Marchi et al. (2014) argue that every centimeter of the Earth’s
surface was jolted by massive impactors before 4 Gya, and that potential
sterilizing events recurred throughout the Hadean. Early Earth is once again an
alien and threatening place.
Figure
5.
The latest perspective on Hadean Earth. Image credit: Simone Marchi
REFERENCES
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Arndt NT, Nisbet EG. (2012) Processes on the young Earth and the habitats of early life. Annual
Review of Earth & Planetary Sciences 40, 521-549. Abstract: http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2012AREPS..40..521A
Bottke
WF, Vokrouhlicky D,
Minton D, Nesvorny D, Morbidelli A, Brasser R, Simonson B. (2011) The Great Archean
Bombardment, or the Late Late Heavy Bombardment. Abstract 2591, 42nd Lunar and Planetary Science Conference.
Bottke
WF, Vokrouhlicky D,
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