Earth is a dynamic planet with an outer layer composed of giant plates that grind together, sliding past or dipping beneath one another, giving rise to earthquakes and volcanoes.
Others separate at undersea mountain ridges, where molten rock spreads out from the centres of major ocean basins.
However, researchers suggest that this was not always the case. Shortly after Earth formed and began to cool, the planet's first outer layer was a solid but deformable shell.
"Models for how the first continental crust formed generally fall into two groups: those that invoke modern-style plate tectonics and those that do not," said Michael Brown, a professor at the University of Maryland in the US.
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"Our research supports the latter - a 'stagnant lid' forming the planet's outer shell early in Earth's history," said Brown.
Researchers studied rocks collected from the East Pilbara Terrane, a large area of ancient granitic crust located in the state of Western Australia.
Rocks here are among the oldest known, ranging from 3.5 to about 2.5 billion years of age.
They also looked at basalt rocks from the associated Coucal formation. Basalt is the rock produced when volcanoes erupt, but it also forms the ocean floor, as molten basalt erupts at spreading ridges in the centre of ocean basins.
In modern-day plate tectonics, when ocean floor basalt reaches the continents, it dips - or subducts - beneath the Earth's surface, where it generates fluids that allow the overlying mantle to melt and eventually create large masses of granite beneath the surface.
Researchers performed thermodynamic calculations to determine the phase equilibria of average Coucal basalt.
Phase equilibria are precise descriptions of how a substance behaves under various temperature and pressure conditions, including the temperature at which melting begins, the amount of melt produced and its chemical composition.
Using the Coucal basalts and Pilbara granites as a starting point, researchers constructed a series of modelling experiments to reflect what might have transpired in an ancient Earth without plate tectonics.
More to the point, this transformation could have occurred in a pressure and temperature scenario consistent with a "stagnant lid," or a single shell covering the entire planet.
The study was published in the journal Nature.
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