The finding proves that Earth remained a fiery ball covered in a magma ocean for a shorter period of time after its creation than previously thought.
The Earth is thought to have formed about 4.5 billion years ago, but little is known about its early years, particularly when it became cool enough for the crust to congeal from a sea of molten rock and for liquid water to form.
But the discovery in recent decades of zircon crystals, some estimated to be as old as 4.4 billion years, threw that theory into doubt, even though the minerals' age was not conclusively proven. Until now.
The new study confirms that zircon grains harvested from western Australia's Jack Hills region crystallised with the formation of the Earth's crust some 4.374 billion years ago, its authors said.
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This was about 160 million years after the creation of the Earth and other planets in our solar system -- "much earlier than previously believed", according to a press statement.
"The study reinforces our conclusion that Earth had a hydrosphere before 4.3 billion years ago", and possibly life not long after, said study co-author John Valley, a geochemist from the University of Wisconsin Madison.
The study was conducted with a new technique called atom-probe tomography that could accurately determine the age of the miniscule mineral fragment by measuring individual lead atoms inside it.