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EARLY EARTH
Clues to the Earth's ancient core
by Staff Writers
Houghton MI (SPX) Jun 07, 2015


Aleksey Smirnov drills into an outcrop in Australia's Widgiemooltha dike swarm. Image courtesy Aleksey Smirnov and Michigan Tech. For a larger version of this image please go here.

Old rocks hold on to their secrets. Now, a geophysicist at Michigan Technological University has unlocked clues trapped in the magnetic signatures of mineral grains in those rocks. These clues will help clear up the murky history of the Earth's early core.

The journal Earth and Planetary Science Letters published a paper on the subject earlier this year. Aleksey Smirnov, an associate professor of geophysics and adjunct associate professor of physics at Michigan Tech, led the study.

The work took him Down Under, where he drilled into rock outcrops in Australia's Widgiemooltha dike swarm that are more than two billion years old. Studying rocks this old--and extracting data from them--is tricky but helps unravel the core's mysteries.

However, Smirnov's findings created their own mystery: the magnetic readings were significantly larger than anticipated. This could have implications for early life on earth.


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Contaminated samples have evidently created some confusion in the timetable of life. On the basis of ultra-clean analyses, an international team, including scientists from the Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry, has disproved supposed evidence that eukaryotes originated 2.5 to 2.8 billion years ago. In contrast to prokaryotes such as bacteria, eukaryotes have a nucleus. Some research ... read more


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