The early Earth : accretion and differentiation / James Badro, Michael Walter, editors.

Contributor(s): Badro, James [editor.] | Walter, Michael (Michael J.) [editor.] | American Geophysical Union [publisher.]Material type: TextTextPublisher number: EB00623999 | Recorded BooksSeries: Geophysical monograph ; 212.Publication details: Washington, D.C. : Hoboken, NJ : American Geophysical Union ; Wiley, [2015]; ©2015Description: 1 online resource : color illustrationsISBN: 9781118860199; 1118860195; 9781118860359; 1118860357; 9781118860366 (electronic bk.); 1118860365 (electronic bk.); 1118860578; 9781118860571Subject(s): Earth (Planet) -- Origin | SCIENCE / Astronomy | Earth's originOnline resources: Wiley Online Library
Contents:
Timing of nebula processes which shaped the precursors of the terrestrial planets / Marc Chaussidon, Ming-Chang Liu -- The Earth's building blocks / Frédéric Moynier, Bruce Fegley, Jr. -- Earth and Terrestrial Planet Formation / Seth Jacobson, Kevin J. Walsh -- Late accretion and the late veneer / Alessandro Morbidelli, Bernard J. Wood -- Early differentiation and core formation: processes and timescales / Francis Nimmo, Thorsten Kleine -- An experimental geochemistry perspective on Earth's core formation / Julien Siebert, Anat Shahar -- Fractional melting and freezing in the deep mantle and implications for the formation of a basal magma ocean / Stéphane Labrosse, John W. Hernlund, Kei Hirose -- Early Differentiation and its Long Term Consequences for Earth Evolution / Richard W. Carlson, Maud Boyet, Jonathan O'Neil, Hanika Rizo, Richard J. Walker.
Summary: The Early Earth: Accretion and Differentiation provides a multidisciplinary overview of the state of the art in understanding the formation and primordial evolution of the Earth. The fundamental structure of the Earth as we know it today was inherited from the initial conditions 4.56 billion years ago as a consequence of planetesimal accretion, large impacts among planetary objects, and planetary-scale differentiation. The evolution of the Earth from a molten ball of metal and magma to the tectonically active, dynamic, habitable planet that we know today is unique among the terrestrial planets, and understanding the earliest processes that led to Earth's current state is the essence of this volume. Important results have emerged from a wide range of disciplines including cosmochemistry, geochemistry, experimental petrology, experimental and theoretical mineral physics and geodynamics. The topics in this volume include: -Condensation of primitive objects in the solar nebula, planetary building blocks -Early and late accretion and planetary dynamic modeling -Primordial differentiation, core formation, Magma Ocean evolution and crystallization. This volume will be a valuable resource for graduate students, academics, and researchers in the fields of geophysics, geochemistry, cosmochemistry, and planetary science.
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"This work is a co-publication between the American Geophysical Union and John Wiley and Sons, Inc."

The Early Earth: Accretion and Differentiation provides a multidisciplinary overview of the state of the art in understanding the formation and primordial evolution of the Earth. The fundamental structure of the Earth as we know it today was inherited from the initial conditions 4.56 billion years ago as a consequence of planetesimal accretion, large impacts among planetary objects, and planetary-scale differentiation. The evolution of the Earth from a molten ball of metal and magma to the tectonically active, dynamic, habitable planet that we know today is unique among the terrestrial planets, and understanding the earliest processes that led to Earth's current state is the essence of this volume. Important results have emerged from a wide range of disciplines including cosmochemistry, geochemistry, experimental petrology, experimental and theoretical mineral physics and geodynamics. The topics in this volume include: -Condensation of primitive objects in the solar nebula, planetary building blocks -Early and late accretion and planetary dynamic modeling -Primordial differentiation, core formation, Magma Ocean evolution and crystallization. This volume will be a valuable resource for graduate students, academics, and researchers in the fields of geophysics, geochemistry, cosmochemistry, and planetary science.

Timing of nebula processes which shaped the precursors of the terrestrial planets / Marc Chaussidon, Ming-Chang Liu -- The Earth's building blocks / Frédéric Moynier, Bruce Fegley, Jr. -- Earth and Terrestrial Planet Formation / Seth Jacobson, Kevin J. Walsh -- Late accretion and the late veneer / Alessandro Morbidelli, Bernard J. Wood -- Early differentiation and core formation: processes and timescales / Francis Nimmo, Thorsten Kleine -- An experimental geochemistry perspective on Earth's core formation / Julien Siebert, Anat Shahar -- Fractional melting and freezing in the deep mantle and implications for the formation of a basal magma ocean / Stéphane Labrosse, John W. Hernlund, Kei Hirose -- Early Differentiation and its Long Term Consequences for Earth Evolution / Richard W. Carlson, Maud Boyet, Jonathan O'Neil, Hanika Rizo, Richard J. Walker.

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