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Acasta Gneiss

Image result for A fist-size sample of the Acasta Gneisses, rocks in northwest Canada that are the oldest known rocks on Earth.

The Acasta Gneiss is a tonalite gneiss in the Slave craton in Northwest Territories, Canada.

The rock body is exposed on an island about 300 kilometres north of Yellowknife.

The rock of the outcrop was metamorphosed 3.58 to 4.031 billion years ago and is the oldest known intact crustal fragment on Earth.[1]

First described in 1989, it was named for the nearby Acasta River east of Great Bear Lake.

The Acasta outcrop is found in a remote area of the [...] people land settlement.

It is the oldest known exposed rock in the world.

Contents:

1 Formation
2 Contention for record
3 Exhibit
4 See also
5 References
6 Bibliography

Formation

The metamorphic rock exposed in the outcrop was previously a granitoid that formed 4.2 billion years ago, an age based on radiometric dating of zircon crystals at 4.2 Ga.[2]

The Acasta Gneiss is important in establishing the early history of the continental crust.

Acasta Gneiss was formed in the Basin Groups unofficial period of the Hadean eon, which came before the Archean: see Timetable of the Precambrian.
Contention for record

In 2008 an age of 4.28 billion years was reported for an outcrop in the Nuvvuagittuq Greenstone Belt on the eastern shores of Hudson Bay, 40 kilometres south of Inukjuak, Quebec, Canada.[3]

However, the dating method used did not involve similar radiometric dating of zircon crystals and it remains somewhat contentious whether the reported date represents the age that the rock itself formed or a residual isotopic signature of older material that melted to form the rock.[4]

Mafic rocks from the Nuvvuagittuq Greenstone Belt have recorded isotopic compositions that can only be produced in the Hadean (i.e. older than 4 billion years ago) and the complete isotopic study of all the lithologies included in the Nuvvuagittuq Greenstone Belt suggests that it was formed nearly 4.4 billion years ago.[5]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acasta_Gneiss

3 posted on 02/09/2019 12:26:13 PM PST by ETL (Obama-Hillary, REAL Russia collusion! Uranium-One Deal, Missile Defense, Iran Deal, Nukes: Click ETL)
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To: ETL
I have read some interesting theories about some of the moons relationships to their planets rings. Something along the line of there being a cycle, where rings form into moons, moons disintegrate (e.g., if there are many, they start crashing into each other into bits), and then lather rinse repeat. Could have happened many times in the planet's history.

Phobos is one of these moons (today, that is)

another place is the rings/moons of Saturn

I might have read this originally about Uranus and its 27 moons, but a quick check turned up no links to help jog my memory.

8 posted on 02/09/2019 12:52:23 PM PST by C210N (Republicans sign check fronts; 'Rats sign check backs.)
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To: ETL

I think my mom has some specimens.


10 posted on 02/09/2019 1:01:04 PM PST by gundog ( Hail to the Chief, bitches!)
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