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Earth's 'Magnetic Personality' Much Older Than Previously Thought


Former FBI director James Comey is sworn in during a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington.
Former FBI director James Comey is sworn in during a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington.

Earth's magnetic field has been a life preserver, protecting against relentless solar winds, streams of charged particles rushing from the Sun, that
otherwise could strip away the planet's atmosphere and water.

"It would be a pretty barren planet without it," said University of Rochester geophysicist John Tarduno.

But there has been debate among scientists about when this vital shield generated by Earth's liquid iron core formed.

Researchers on Thursday said evidence entombed in tiny crystals retrieved from the outback of western Australia indicates the magnetic field arose at least 4.2 billion years ago, much earlier than previously believed.

Previous research had estimated the field originated about 3.5 billion years ago, roughly a billion years after Earth's formation.

The new study shows Earth was protected by its magnetic field beginning very early in its history.

"The solar wind would have been much more intense 4 billion years ago," said Tarduno, who led the study published in the journal Science.

"Its erosional capability was perhaps 10 times greater than it is today. Without a magnetic shield, you would have this tremendous possibility of eroding the atmosphere and removing water from the planet," he continued.

The study focused on a mineral called magnetite contained inside ancient zircon crystals from Australia's Jack Hills.

Magnetite preserves a record of magnetic field strength at the time the mineral was trapped in the zircon.

The researchers examined magnetite in zircon crystals measuring about 0.1 to 0.2 of a millimeter in size and dating from about 3.2 billion to 4.2 billion years ago, and concluded Earth possessed a magnetic field during that entire period.

Without a magnetic field, it may have been difficult for life to emerge on Earth as it has.

"Knowing the initiation of the magnetic field has implications for habitability conditions of early Earth," said University of Rochester geologist Rory Cottrell.

"Finding suitable geologic material to measure deep time is a challenge in and of itself. Zircon grains from Western Australia may be one way to obtain such information about the early magnetic field," Cottrell added.

Only two of the solar system's rocky planets, Earth and Mercury, possess a magnetic field. Mars previously had one, but it dissipated about 4 billion years ago.

"Mars once had a much denser atmosphere and oceans," said Tarduno.

The magnetic field's disappearance exposed Mars to solar winds that may have peeled off the atmosphere and water, leaving the planet desolate.

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