Earth is an active place. Earthquakes rip along plate boundaries, volcanoes spew fountains of molten lava and mountain ranges, and seabed is constantly created and destroyed.
1. Origin and Evolution of Earth Research Questions for a Changing Planet Questions about the origins and nature of Earth have long preoccupied human thought and the scientific endeavor. Deciphering the planet’s history and processes could improve the abil- ity to predict catastrophes like earthquakes and volcanoes, to manage Earth’s resources, and to anticipate changes in climate and geologic processes. This report captures, in a series of questions, the essential scientific challenges that constitute the frontier of Earth science at the start of the 21st century. E arth is an active place. Earthquakes rip along plate boundaries, volcanoes spew fountains of molten lava, and mountain ranges and seabed are constantly created and destroyed. Earth scientists have long been concerned with deciphering the history—and predicting the future—of this active planet. Over the past four decades, Earth scientists have made great strides in understanding Earth’s workings. Scientists have ever-improving tools to understand how Earth’s internal processes shape the planet’s surface, how life can be sustained over billions of years, and how geological, biological, atmospheric, and oceanic processes interact to produce climate—and climatic change. At the request of the U.S. Department of Energy, Na- tional Aeronautics and Space Administration, National Science Foundation, and U.S. Geological Survey, the National Research Council assembled a committee to propose and explore grand ques- tions in Earth science. This report, which is the result of the committee’s deliberations and input solicited from the Earth science community, describes ten “big picture” Earth science issues being pursued today. Answers to these fundamental questions could profoundly improve understanding of the planet on which we live and strategies for managing our environment. Origins 1. How did Earth and other planets form? The Solar System is composed of a set of radically different types of planets and moons— from the gas giants Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune to the rocky inner planets. Centuries of studying Earth, its neighboring planets, and meteorites have enabled the development of models of the birth of the Solar System. Astronomical observations from increasingly powerful telescopes have added a new dimension to these models, as have studies of asteroids, comets, and other plan- ets via spacecraft, as well as geochemical studies of stardust and meteorites. While it is generally agreed that the Sun and planets all coalesced out of the same nebular cloud, little is known about how Earth obtained its particular chemical composition, or why the other planets ended up so different from Earth and from each other. For example, why has Earth, unlike every other planet, retained the unique properties—such as the presence of water—that allow it to support life? New measurements of Solar System bodies and extrasolar planets and objects, will further advance understanding of the origin of Earth and the Solar System.
2. 2. What happened during Earth’s “dark age” (the and in what form did life first appear? The origin of first 500 million years)? life is one of the most intriguing, difficult, and endur- It is now believed that during Earth’s forma- ing questions in science. tion, a Mars-sized planet collided with it, creating a Scientists have toiled to create life from sparks huge cloud of debris that became Earth’s Moon and and gasses in the laboratory to illuminate how life first releasing so much heat that the entire planet melted. formed in Earth’s early conditions. But even pinning But little is known about how the resulting molten down what those early conditions were remains an rock evolved during the planet’s infancy into the elusive goal. From what materials did life originate? Earth we know today. The first 500 million years of Did life, as Darwin speculated, originate in a “warm Earth’s existence, known as the Hadean Eon, is a little pond,” perhaps a tidal pool repeatedly dried and critical missing link in understanding how the planet’s refreshed? Or might life be rooted among hydrother- atmosphere, oceans, and differentiated layers of core, mal vents? Could life’s origins even lie beyond Earth? mantle, and outer crust developed. Scientists have Developing an accurate picture of the physical almost no idea how fast the surface environment environments and the chemical building blocks avail- evolved, how the transition took place, or when condi- able to early life is a critical Earth science challenge. tions became hospitable enough to support life. Clues to shed light on these mysteries stem largely Some clues from Earth’s oldest minerals (zir- from investigations of Earth’s ancient rocks and min- cons), as well as from Earth’s Moon and other planets erals—the only remaining evidence of the time when are allowing a clearer picture of the Hadean Eon to Earth’s life first emerged. gradually emerge. The future is certain to provide additional breakthroughs. The amount of information Earth’s Interior that can be extracted from even the tiniest samples of old rocks and minerals is increasing rapidly, and with 4. How does Earth’s interior work, and how does it concerted effort, it is expected that many more ancient affect the surface? rocks and mineral samples will be found. As planets age and cool off, their internal and surface processes gradually change. Manifestations of 3. How did life begin? changes within Earth’s interior—such as the develop- In The Origin of Species, Charles Darwin (1859) ment of mountains and volcanoes—have a huge influ- hypothesized that new species arise by the modifica- ence on the nature of Earth’s surface and atmosphere. tion of existing ones—that the raw material of life is Scientists know that much of the rock in the life. But somehow and somewhere, the tree of life had Earth’s mantle (the thick layer between the core and to take root from nonliving precursors. When, where, crust), which is under extreme pressure and very high temperature, behaves like a viscous liquid. This vast interior, however, is largely inaccessible to direct study. For over a century, seismic wave, geomagnetic, and gravity measurements made at the surface have been improving understanding of Earth’s internal structure. Despite continuing advances, however, scientists are only beginning to explore the connec- tions between Earth’s core, magnetic field, mantle, and surface and to investigate why Earth differs from other planets, or how it may change in the future. 5. Why does Earth have plate tectonics and continents? A major focus of Earth science has been on deciphering the nature of the continents—the features that make Earth habitable for land-dwelling life. How Stromatolites, like this one from Siberia, provide clues and when did the continents form? How have they about the emergence of life on Earth. These patterned changed? Why do the Atlantic coastlines of South rock formations were built by the trapping and building America and Africa look like pieces of a puzzle? of sediment particles by Earth’s early microbial commu- Plate tectonics—the description of Earth’s nities. Courtesy of Andrew Knoll, Harvard. outermost layers in terms of a small number of large