Possible Eoarchean Records of the Geomagnetic Field Preserved in the Isua Supracrustal Belt, Southern West Greenland

Author:

Nichols Claire I. O.12ORCID,Weiss Benjamin P.1ORCID,Eyster Athena3ORCID,Martin Craig R.1ORCID,Maloof Adam C.4ORCID,Kelly Nigel M.5ORCID,Zawaski Mike J.67ORCID,Mojzsis Stephen J.68910ORCID,Watson E. Bruce11,Cherniak Daniele J.12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge MA USA

2. Department of Earth Sciences University of Oxford Oxford UK

3. Department of Earth and Climate Sciences Tufts University Medford MA USA

4. Department of Geosciences Princeton University Princeton NJ USA

5. Bruker Nano Analytics Madison WI USA

6. Department of Geological Sciences University of Colorado Boulder Boulder CO USA

7. Department of Geology and Geophysics Texas A&M University College Station TX USA

8. MTA Centre of Excellence Origins Research Institute Research Centre for Astronomy and Earth Sciences (CSFK), Konkoly Observatory Budapest Hungary

9. Department of Lithospheric Research University of Vienna UZA 2 Vienna Austria

10. Institute for Earth Sciences Friedrich‐Schiller University Burgweg Jena Germany

11. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Troy NY USA

12. Ion Beam Laboratory State University of New York at Albany Albany NY USA

Abstract

AbstractRecovering ancient records of Earth's magnetic field is essential for determining the role of the magnetosphere in protecting early Earth from cosmic radiation and atmospheric escape. We present paleomagnetic field tests hinting that a record of Earth's 3.7‐billion‐year (Ga) old magnetic field may be preserved in the northeastern Isua Supracrustal Belt as a chemical remanent magnetization acquired during amphibolite‐grade metamorphism in the banded iron formation. Multiple petrological and geochronological lines of evidence indicate that the northernmost part of Isua has not experienced metamorphic temperatures exceeding 380°C since the Eoarchean, suggesting the rocks have not been significantly heated since magnetization was acquired. We use “pseudo” baked contact tests (intrusions emplaced 3.26–3.5 Ga ago) and a fold test (folding 3.6 Ga ago) to demonstrate that some samples preserve a ca. 3.7 Ga record of the magnetic field. We recover a field strength of >15 µT. This suggests that Earth's magnetic field may have been weak enough to enhance atmospheric escape during the Archean.

Funder

Simons Foundation

American Philosophical Society

John Templeton Foundation

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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