Impact Melting of Frozen Oceans on the Early Earth: Implications for the Origin of Life (original) (raw)

ADS

;

Abstract

Without sufficient greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, the early Earth would have become a permanently frozen planet because the young Sun was less luminous than it is today. Several resolutions to this faint young Sun-frozen Earth paradox have been proposed, with an atmosphere rich in CO_2 being the one generally favored. However, these models assume that there were no mechanisms for melting a once frozen ocean. Here we show that bolide impacts between about 3.6 and 4.0 billion years ago could have episodically melted an ice-covered early ocean. Thaw-freeze cycles associated with bolide impacts could have been important for the initiation of abiotic reactions that gave rise to the first living organisms.

Publication:

Proceedings of the National Academy of Science

Pub Date:

February 1994

DOI:

10.1073/pnas.91.4.1248

Bibcode:

1994PNAS...91.1248B