Earth's 1st continents may have appeared 750 million years earlier
ABC News
Earth's first continents may actually have appeared 750 million years earlier than first thought.
This is an Inside Science story.
Earth's first continents may have emerged from the oceans roughly 750 million years earlier than previously thought, rising from the seas in a manner completely unlike modern continents. These early masses of solid rock may have floated buoyantly atop magma welling up from below, a new study finds.
Unlike any other known planet, Earth possesses both continents and oceans on its surface. The emergence of land from sea greatly influenced Earth's atmosphere, oceans, climate and proliferation of life. For instance, the runoff from continents is the primary source of a number of key nutrients for the oceans, such as phosphorus, which is needed to create DNA and other biological building blocks.
"The delivery of these essential nutrients to the oceans on the early Earth was critical in establishing and maintaining the earliest life-forms," said study co-author Priyadarshi Chowdhury, a geologist at Monash University in Melbourne, Australia. "The emergence of the first landmasses was therefore a pivotal event in our planet's history."