2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.sedgeo.2017.06.001
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Continental growth seen through the sedimentary record

Abstract: International audienceSedimentary rocks and detrital minerals sample large areas of the continental crust, and they are increasingly seen as a reliable archive for its global evolution. This study presents two approaches to model the growth of the continental crust through the sedimentary archive. The first builds on the variations in U-Pb, Hf and O isotopes in global databases of detrital zircons. We show that uncertainty in the Hf isotope composition of the mantle reservoir from which new crust separated, in… Show more

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Cited by 91 publications
(69 citation statements)
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References 241 publications
(391 reference statements)
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“…In a recent review on continental growth, Dhuime et al (2017) proposed that 65% of the present continental crust existed before 3 Ga. This is supported with similar results from different continental growth models built on records of detrital zircons and sedimentary rocks.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 54%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In a recent review on continental growth, Dhuime et al (2017) proposed that 65% of the present continental crust existed before 3 Ga. This is supported with similar results from different continental growth models built on records of detrital zircons and sedimentary rocks.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 54%
“…These models fall into two competing camps based on the nature of crustal growth: continuous growth with differing growth rates through Earth history (e.g., Hurley and Rand, 1969;Armstrong, 1981;Allègre and Rousseau, 1984;Taylor and McLennan, 1985;Armstrong, 1991;Taylor and McLennan, 1996;Belousova et al, 2010;Dhuime et al, 2012); versus episodic growth corresponding to supercontinent cycles or mantle plume activity (e.g., McCulloch and Bennett, 1994;Condie, 1998Condie, , 2000Condie, , 2004Rino et al, 2004;Campbell and Allen, 2008;Voice et al, 2011). Using growth models built on records of detrital zircons and sedimentary rocks, which may predominantly characterise the eroded continental crust emerged above the sea level (Flament et al, 2013), Dhuime et al (2017) proposed that 65% of the present continental crust existed by 3 Ga. They argued that there has been a continuous growth of continental crust throughout the evolution of the planet with a significant drop in net production rate from 2.9 -3.4 km 3 yr −1 on average to 0.6 -0.7 km 3 yr −1 on average at around ∼ 3 Ga. Table 4.…”
Section: Comparison With Continental Crust Growth Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…On a global scale, statistical analysis of the chemical composition of continental igneous rocks with ages spanning 3.8 Ga to the present day reveals patterns consistent with secular cooling of the mantle since the late Archaean (Keller and Schoene, 2012). The zircon record and the median Rb/Sr ratios and SiO 2 contents of crustal rocks have been attributed to the widespread appearance of subduction at around 3.0 Ga (Dhuime et al, 2012(Dhuime et al, , 2015(Dhuime et al, , 2017Tang et al, 2016). This is consistent with the widespread survival of metamorphic rocks with contrasting thermal gradients since the Neoarchean that may indicate the beginning of subduction and consequent collisional orogenesis at that time, although there is little evidence before the Neoproterozoic for the cold collision and deep subduction of continental crust that characterises the modern plate tectonic regime (Brown and Johnson, 2018).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…A growing body of petrological and geochemical (including isotopic) evidence from diverse datasets has been interpreted to indicate the widespread appearance of subduction in the Mesoarchean, ultimately leading to stabilisation of the lithosphere and a globally linked network of plate boundaries (i.e. plate tectonics) by the end of the Archaean (Bercovici and Ricard, 2014;Brown and Johnson, 2018;Dhuime et al, 2012Dhuime et al, , 2015Dhuime et al, , 2017Griffin et al, 2014;Hawkesworth and Brown, 2018;Moyen and Laurent, 2017;Naeraa et al, 2012;Van Kranendonk et al, 2015b). For the TTG dataset discussed here, we have emphasised a statistical approach that has identified clearly the importance of some fundamental change across the interval 3.3-3.0 Ga, which is particularly clear in the change point analysis (Fig.…”
Section: The Emergence Of Global Plate Tectonicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Detrital zircon age spectra have been used to address a variety of questions relating to crustal growth/evolution (Belousova et al., ; Dhuime, Hawkesworth, Cawood, & Storey, ; Dhuime, Hawkesworth, Delavault, & Cawood, ) and various strategies have been employed to optimize their representative nature. Such strategies include high‐density sampling within a single sedimentary structure (Lawrence, Cox, Mapes, & Coleman, ), sampling modern river mouths and comparing this to the known local basement (Bradley, O'Sullivan, & Bradley, ), sampling throughout a well‐defined stratigraphic succession (Ireland, Flöttmann, Fanning, Gibson, & Preiss, ) and data backfilling through geographic resampling (McKenzie et al., ; Puetz et al., ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%