Earth's first 600 million years are traditionally seen as a period of Earth history when the hot planet was hellish and uninhabitable, according to Judith Coggon at the University of Bonn, Germany.
However, this period may have been relatively short-lived.
Coggon and her colleagues have found that rocks in Greenland contain a chemical signature from the mantle 4.1 billion years ago - just 400 million years after our planet was born.
Models have suggested some "iron-loving" metals like gold and platinum - which dissolve in molten iron - should all have sunk into the iron-rich core as it formed.
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Since they are relatively abundant in the mantle today, it has been suggested that meteorites and comets smashing into Earth about 3.9 billion years ago replenished the stock.
This hypothesised event, known as the Late Veneer, is also thought to have given Earth most of its water, delivered as ice.
But Coggon's rock samples suggest that Earth's mantle had already been topped up with iron-loving minerals by 4.1 billion years ago, meaning the Late Veneer, and the birth of Earth's oceans, must have occurred earlier.
If so, Earth gained its oceans little more than 200 million years after it formed - which also pushes back the date for the earliest possible origin of life, Coggon said.