The eon's name "Hadean" comes from Hades, the Greek god of the underworld (whose name is also used to describe the underworld itself), referring to the hellish conditions then prevailing on early Earth: the planet had just been formed from recent accretion, and its surface was still molten with superheated lava due to that, the abundance of short-lived radioactive elements, and frequent impact events with other Solar System bodies.
The term was coined by American geologist Preston Cloud, originally to label the period before the earliest known rocks on Earth.[10][11]W.B. Harland later coined an almost synonymous term, the Priscoan period, from priscus, a Latin word for 'ancient'.[12] Other, older texts refer to the eon as the Pre-Archean.[13][14]
Prior to the 1980s and the discovery of Hadean lithic fragments, scientific narratives of the early Earth explanations were almost entirely in the hands of geodynamic modelers.[15]
In the last decades of the 20th century, geologists identified a few Hadean rocks from western Greenland, northwestern Canada, and Western Australia. In 2015, traces of carbon minerals interpreted as "remains of biotic life" were found in 4.1-billion-year-old rocks in Western Australia.[16][17]
In many other areas, xenocryst (or relict) Hadean zircons enclosed in older rocks indicate that younger rocks have formed on older terranes and have incorporated some of the older material. One example occurs in the Guiana shield from the Iwokrama Formation of southern Guyana where zircon cores have been dated at 4.22 Ga.[19]
Atmosphere
A sizable quantity of water would have been in the material that formed Earth.[20] Water molecules would have escaped Earth's gravity more easily when the planet was less massive during its formation. Photodissociation by short-wave ultraviolet in sunlight could splitsurface water molecules into oxygen and hydrogen, the former of which would be readily removed by the then-reducing atmosphere, while the latter (along with the similarly light helium) would be expected to continually leave the atmosphere (as it does to the present day) due to atmospheric escape.
Part of the ancient planet is theorized to have been disrupted by the impact that created the Moon, which should have caused the melting of one or two large regions of Earth. Earth's present composition suggests that there was not complete remelting as it is difficult to completely melt and mix huge rock masses.[21] However, a fair fraction of material should have been vaporized by this impact. The material would have condensed within 2,000 years.[22] The initial magma ocean solidified within 5 million years,[23] leaving behind hot volatiles which probably resulted in a heavy CO 2 atmosphere with hydrogen and water vapor. The initial heavy atmosphere had a surface temperature of 230 °C (446 °F) and an atmospheric pressure of above 27 standard atmospheres.[22]
Oceans
Studies of zircons have found that liquid water may have existed between 4.0 and 4.4 billion years ago, very soon after the formation of Earth.[18][24] Liquid water oceans existed despite the high surface temperature, because at an atmospheric pressure of 27 atmospheres, water remains liquid even at those high temperatures.[22]
The most likely source of the water in the Hadean ocean was outgassing from the Earth's mantle.[25]Bombardment origin of a substantial amount of water is unlikely, due to the incompatibility of isotope fractions between the Earth and comets.[20]
Asteroid impacts during the Hadean and into the Archean would have periodically disrupted the ocean. The geological record from 3.2 Gya contains evidence of multiple impacts of objects up to 100 kilometres (62 mi) in diameter.[26] Each such impact would have boiled off up to 100 metres (330 ft) of a global ocean, and temporarily raised the atmospheric temperature to 500 °C (932 °F).[26] However, the frequency of meteorite impacts is still under study: the Earth may have gone through long periods when liquid oceans and life were possible.[24]
The liquid water would absorb the carbon dioxide in the early atmosphere; this would not be enough by itself to substantially reduce the amount of CO 2.[22]
Plate tectonics
A 2008 study of zircons found that Australian Hadean rock contains minerals pointing to the existence of plate tectonics as early as 4 billion years ago (approximately 600 million years after Earth's formation).[27] However, some geologists suggest that the zircons could have been formed by meteorite impacts.[28] The direct evidence of Hadean geology from zircons is limited, because the zircons are largely gathered in one locality in Australia.[6][29] Geophysical models are underconstrained, but can paint a general picture of the state of Earth in the Hadean.[6][30]
Mantle convection in the Hadean was likely vigorous, due to lower viscosity.[6] The lower viscosity was due to the high levels of radiogenic heat and the fact that water in the mantle had not yet fully outgassed.[31] Whether the vigorous convection led to plate tectonics in the Hadean or was confined under a rigid lid is still a matter of debate.[6][9][29][32] The presence of Hadean oceans is thought to have triggered plate tectonics.[33]
Subduction due to plate tectonics would have removed carbonate from the early oceans, contributing to the removal of the CO 2-rich early atmosphere. Removal of this early atmosphere is evidence of Hadean plate tectonics.[34]
If plate tectonics occurred in the Hadean, it would have formed continental crust.[35] Different models predict different amounts of continental crust during the Hadean.[8] The work of Dhiume et al. predicts that by the end of the Hadean, the continental crust had only 25% of today's area.[7] The models of Korenaga, et al. predict that the continental crust grew to present-day volume sometime between 4.2 and 4.0 Gya.[35][36]
Continents
The amount of exposed land in the Hadean is only loosely dependent on the amount of continental crust: it also depends on the ocean level.[6] In models where plate tectonics started in the Archean, Earth has a global ocean in the Hadean.[37][38] The high heat of the mantle may have made it difficult to support high elevations in the Hadean.[39][40] If continents did form in the Hadean, their growth competed with outgassing of water from the mantle.[6] Continents may have appeared in the mid-Hadean, and then disappeared under a thick ocean by the end of the Hadean.[41] The limited amount of land has implications for the origin of life.[6]
Possible life
Abundant Hadean-like geothermalmicroenvironments were shown by Salditt et al. to have the potential to support the synthesis and replication of RNA and thus possibly the evolution of a primitive life form.[42] Porous rock systems comprising heated air-water interfaces were shown to allow ribozyme-catalyzed RNA replication of sense and antisense strands followed by subsequent strand dissociation, thus enabling combined synthesis, release and folding of active ribozymes.[42] Such a primitive RNA system also may have been able to undergo template strand switching during replication (genetic recombination) as occurs during the RNA replication of extant coronaviruses.[43]
A study published in 2024 inferred the last common ancestor of all current life to have emerged during the Hadean, between 4.09 and 4.33 Gya.[44]
^ abcCohen, Kim (October 2022). "New edition of the Chart - 2022-10". International Commission on Stratigraphy. Retrieved 16 January 2023. 2022/10 - Hadean: GSSA instated as ratified by IUGS (5-10-2022). The GSSA is 4,567.30 ± 0.16 Ma.
^Shaw, D.M. (1975). Early history of the Earth. Proceedings of the NATO Advanced Study Institute. Leicester: John Wiley. pp. 33–53. ISBN0-471-01488-5.
^Jarvis, Gary T.; Campbell, Ian H. (December 1983). "Archean komatiites and geotherms: Solution to an apparent contradiction". Geophysical Research Letters. 10 (12): 1133–1136. Bibcode:1983GeoRL..10.1133J. doi:10.1029/GL010i012p01133.
^Harrison, T. Mark (2020). Hadean earth. Cham: Springer. p. 4. ISBN978-3030466862.
^ abcWilde, Simon A.; Valley, John W.; Peck, William H.; Graham, Colin M. (2001). "Evidence from detrital zircons for the existence of continental crust and oceans on the Earth 4.4 Gyr ago". Nature. 409 (6817): 175–178. Bibcode:2001Natur.409..175W. doi:10.1038/35051550. PMID11196637. S2CID4319774.
^Reis, HLS; Sanchez, EAM (2020). "Precambrian". In Alderton, David; Elias, Scott (eds.). Encyclopedia of Geology. Elsevier Science. p. 30. ISBN9780081029091.
^ abLowe, DR; Byerly, GR (2015). "Geologic record of partial ocean evaporation triggered by giant asteroid impacts, 3.29–3.23 billion years ago". Geology. 43 (6): 535–538. Bibcode:2015Geo....43..535L. doi:10.1130/G36665.1.
Wyche, S.; Nelson, D. R.; Riganti, A. (2004). "4350–3130 Ma detrital zircons in the Southern Cross Granite–Greenstone Terrane, Western Australia: implications for the early evolution of the Yilgarn Craton". Australian Journal of Earth Sciences. 51 (1): 31–45. Bibcode:2004AuJES..51...31W. doi:10.1046/j.1400-0952.2003.01042.x.
Carley, Tamara L.; et al. (2014). "Iceland is not a magmatic analog for the Hadean: Evidence from the zircon record". Earth and Planetary Science Letters. 405 (1): 85–97. Bibcode:2014E&PSL.405...85C. doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2014.08.015.