TY - JOUR
T1 - In search of late-stage planetary building blocks
AU - Walker, Richard J.
AU - Bermingham, Katherine
AU - Liu, Jingao
AU - Puchtel, Igor S.
AU - Touboul, Mathieu
AU - Worsham, Emily A.
N1 - Funding Information:
This work has been supported by the NASA grants NNX13AF83G and NNA14AB07A , and NSF-CSEDI grants EAR1160728 and EAR1265169 . These sources of funding are gratefully acknowledged. RJW also thanks the University of Maryland for providing sabbatical support, as well as the Carnegie Institution of Science's Department of Terrestrial Magnetism, the Lunar and Planetary Institute, and the Tokyo Institute of Technology's Earth-Life Science Institute for hosting him during the writing of this paper. David Rubie and an unidentified reviewer are thanked for providing very thorough and helpful criticisms of the original manuscript.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2015/9/14
Y1 - 2015/9/14
N2 - Genetic contributions to the final stages of planetary growth, including materials associated with the giant Moon-forming impact, late accretion, and late heavy bombardment are examined using siderophile elements. Isotopic similarities between the Earth and Moon for both lithophile and siderophile elements collectively lead to the suggestion that the genetics of the building blocks for Earth, and the impactor involved in the Moon-forming event were broadly similar, and shared some strong genetic affinities with enstatite chondrites. The bulk genetic fingerprint of materials subsequently added to Earth by late accretion, defined as the addition of ~0.5wt.% of Earth's mass to the mantle, following cessation of core formation, was characterized by 187Os/188Os and Pd/Ir ratios that were also similar to those in some enstatite chondrites. However, the integrated fingerprint of late accreted matter differs from enstatite chondrites in terms of the relative abundances of certain other HSE, most notably Ru/Ir. The final ≤0.05wt.% addition of material to the Earth and Moon, believed by some to be part of a late heavy bombardment, included a component with much more fractionated relative HSE abundances than evidenced in the average late accretionary component.Heterogeneous 182W/184W isotopic compositions of some ancient terrestrial rocks suggest that some very early-formed mantle domains remained chemically distinct for long periods of time following primary planetary accretion. This evidence for sluggish mixing of the early mantle suggests that if late accretionary contributions to the mantle were genetically diverse, it may be possible to isotopically identify the disparate primordial components in the terrestrial rock record using the siderophile element tracers Ru and Mo.
AB - Genetic contributions to the final stages of planetary growth, including materials associated with the giant Moon-forming impact, late accretion, and late heavy bombardment are examined using siderophile elements. Isotopic similarities between the Earth and Moon for both lithophile and siderophile elements collectively lead to the suggestion that the genetics of the building blocks for Earth, and the impactor involved in the Moon-forming event were broadly similar, and shared some strong genetic affinities with enstatite chondrites. The bulk genetic fingerprint of materials subsequently added to Earth by late accretion, defined as the addition of ~0.5wt.% of Earth's mass to the mantle, following cessation of core formation, was characterized by 187Os/188Os and Pd/Ir ratios that were also similar to those in some enstatite chondrites. However, the integrated fingerprint of late accreted matter differs from enstatite chondrites in terms of the relative abundances of certain other HSE, most notably Ru/Ir. The final ≤0.05wt.% addition of material to the Earth and Moon, believed by some to be part of a late heavy bombardment, included a component with much more fractionated relative HSE abundances than evidenced in the average late accretionary component.Heterogeneous 182W/184W isotopic compositions of some ancient terrestrial rocks suggest that some very early-formed mantle domains remained chemically distinct for long periods of time following primary planetary accretion. This evidence for sluggish mixing of the early mantle suggests that if late accretionary contributions to the mantle were genetically diverse, it may be possible to isotopically identify the disparate primordial components in the terrestrial rock record using the siderophile element tracers Ru and Mo.
KW - Building blocks
KW - Giant impact
KW - Late accretion
KW - Late heavy bombardment
KW - Siderophile elements
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U2 - 10.1016/j.chemgeo.2015.06.028
DO - 10.1016/j.chemgeo.2015.06.028
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:84956707901
SN - 0009-2541
VL - 411
SP - 125
EP - 142
JO - Chemical Geology
JF - Chemical Geology
ER -