HomeScienceEarth's early oceans may have been heavy on the salt

Earth’s early oceans may have been heavy on the salt


master mentalism tricks

Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

Yale scientists say Earth’s ancient oceans likely were much saltier than they are today—a finding that may spice up our understanding of how life, atmosphere, and climate evolved on the planet.

In a new study, Yale professor of Earth & planetary sciences Jun Korenaga and graduate student Meng Guo suggest that for the first 500 million years of Earth’s existence, its oceans may have contained a salt level as high as 7.5%. Today’s oceans, by comparison, are about 2.5% salt.

Previous estimates for salinity of the early oceans, all based on indirect data, had ranged from the current level to 10 times higher.

“This is just the beginning of deciphering the chemistry of the early ocean, as there are many other unknowns, but now we have a solid foundation to build upon,” Korenaga said.

The study appears in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Korenaga and Guo began their research with a broader, more fundamental question in mind. They wanted to know how much stable halogen material—elements such as fluorine, chlorine (found in salt), bromine, and iodine that, when they react with metals, produce a range of salts— exists on Earth.

Halogens play a critical role in some of the most basic processes related to the planet’s formation and evolution, including the way Earth’s atmosphere, oceans, and rocky mantle interact. The presence of halogens in seawater is particularly important, due to the essential nature of oceans in making life on Earth possible.

“Seawater chemistry dictates not only the acidity of the ocean, but also the way carbon dioxide is partitioned between the atmosphere and the ocean,” Guo said.

Until now, estimates for the global abundance of halogens have been based on an assumption that the ratio of certain elements in the crust and the mantle—Earth’s 3,000-kilometer-thick rocky layer—has remained constant throughout melting and crystallization, and these estimates have suggested that most halogens exist close to the surface.

Korenaga and Guo say that isn’t the case. They created a new method to estimate the global levels of halogens, based on a new algorithmic tool and the latest science about how other elements cycle through the Earth’s surface and interior layers.

Their new finding suggests that chloride and other halogens had largely been expelled from the planet’s interior during Earth’s first 500 million years—bringing them closer to Earth’s crusty surface and oceans—and then cycled most of them back into the mantle afterwards.

“Our finding is entirely opposite to the conventional wisdom,” Korenaga said.

Study opens new questions on how the atmosphere and oceans formed More information: A halogen budget of the bulk silicate Earth points to a history of early halogen degassing followed by net regassing, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2021). doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2116083118 Provided by Yale University

Citation: Earth’s early oceans may have been heavy on the salt (2021, December 15) retrieved 25 December 2021 from https://phys.org/news/2021-12-earth-early-oceans-heavy-salt.html

This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Read The Full Article Here


trick photography
Advertisingfutmillion

Popular posts

Hollywood Spotlight: Director Jon Frenkel Garcia
The Dutchman Cast: André Holland, Zazie Beetz & More Join
The Creator Reactions: Gareth Edwards’ Latest Is One of 2023’s
Company Paid Critics For Rotten Tomatoes Reviews
‘Fire Country’ Sneak Peek: Sharon Gets Honest With Vince During
Anna Paquin Reveals Health Issues Have Not ‘Been Easy’ as
Why X-Men 97 is the Greatest Reboot of All Time
The 50 Best Historical Dramas: ‘Shirley,’ ‘The Chosen’ & More
Streaking in Tongues’ “Einstein’s Napkin”
Greye is Back With New Album
Universal Dice’s “Curse”
Society of the Silver Cross’ “Wife of the Sea”
9 Boob Tapes That Work For All Busts, Shapes, and
Here’s Why Apple Cider Vinegar Is the Ingredient Your Hair
I Travel a Lot for Work—These Are the Useful Items
The Best Street Style Looks From the Fall 2023 Couture
Physician by Day, Vigilante by Night in This Action-Packed Cyberpunk
10 Of The Best New Children’s Books Out April 2024
Interview with James Ungurait, Author of I’m The Same
Child Psychologist and Mother Shares CBT Teaching Techniques That Work
Positive associations between premenstrual disorders and perinatal depression
Poem: ‘SnapShot, 1968’
What is the smallest animal on Earth?
Experimental weight loss pill seems to be more potent than
Killing TikTok
Comedy or Tragedy?
BYD Atto 3 Electric SUV With Blade Battery Technology Launched
Bitcoin Falls to $19,000 in Anticipation of Tighter Fed Policy