Litcius/Paper detail

The Geological History of Water: From Earth’s Accretion to the Modern Deep Water Cycle

Lars Rüpke, Fabrice Gaillard

2024Elements11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The abundance of water on Earth and its distribution between surficial and deep reservoirs are the outcome of 4.6 billion years of geological history involving various mechanisms of water in and outgassing. Here, we use the metaphor of a pipeline connecting Earth’s deep and surface water reservoirs. The net flux through this pipeline has changed over time due to contrasting Hadean, Archean, and modern geodynamic regimes. Most water was dissolved in the primordial magma ocean, entrapped in the solidifying mantle, and massively released by volcanism during the Hadean and Archaean. As Earth cooled, plate tectonics enabled water ingassing into the mantle, which appears to exceed outgassing under the modern tectonic regime, implying that Earth’s surface has been drying out and will continue to do so.

Topics & Concepts

Earth (classical element)Water cycleAccretion (finance)AstrobiologyEarth historyGeologyDeep waterEarth scienceDeep timeOceanographyPaleontologyAstronomyAstrophysicsPhysicsEcologyBiologyGeological and Geochemical AnalysisGeology and Paleoclimatology ResearchHydrocarbon exploration and reservoir analysis