PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Hadean-age rocks preserved in the Nuvvuagittuq Greenstone Belt, Canada

Summary author: Walter Beckwith

2025-06-26
(Press-News.org) The Nuvvuagittuq Greenstone Belt (NGB) – a complex geological sequence in northeastern Canada – harbors surviving fragments of Earth’s oldest crust, dating back to ~4.16 billion years old, according to a new study. The preservation of Hadean rocks on Earth’s surface could provide valuable insights into the planet’s earliest times. Much about Earth’s earliest geologic history remains poorly understood due to the rarity of Hadean-age (>4.03 billion-year-old) rocks and minerals. These ancient materials are typically altered or destroyed as the planet’s crust is recycled through ongoing tectonic processes. One candidate for surviving Hadean-age crustal rock is the NGB, which contains rock argued to be as old as 4.3 billion years. However, this claim is controversial; some argue that the isotopic data underpinning these estimates may instead reflect later geological mixing processes rather than the true age of the formation. If shown to be Hadean in origin, the NGB would represent the oldest preserved rock sequence on Earth. It would offer critical insights into early Earth geology, including the potential setting for the emergence of life.

 

To constrain the age of the NGB, Christian Sole and colleagues focused on a specific type of ancient rocks – metagabbroic intrusions – within the belt. According to the authors, these intrusions intersect older basaltic rocks, and this feature allowed the authors to use combined uranium-lead (U-Pb) dating with both short- and long-lived neodymium (Sm-Nd) isotopic analyses to determine a lower age limit on the more ancient formations (the older basaltic rocks). Sole et al. report that the Sm-Nd data yielded consistent isochron ages around 4.16 billion years, regardless of sample location or mineral composition. The fact that both isotopic systems yield the same age in rocks linked by clear evidence of magmatic differentiation strongly supports their Hadean-age crystallization. This, in turn, supports the idea that fragments of mafic crust from the Hadean Eon have survived in the NGB.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Novel “digital fossil-mining” approach uncovers hidden fossils, revealing squids’ ancient origins

2025-06-26
Using an innovative “digital fossil-mining” approach, researchers have uncovered hundreds of previously hidden fossil squid beaks, revealing a record that squids originated and became ecologically dominant roughly 100 million years ago – well before the end-Cretaceous extinction. Squids are the most diverse and globally distributed group of marine cephalopods in the modern ocean, where they play a vital role in ocean ecosystems as both predators and prey. Their evolutionary success is widely considered to be related ...

Review: New framework needed to assess complex “cascading” natural hazards

2025-06-26
In a Review, Brian Yanites and colleagues argue the need for a unified, interdisciplinary approach to studying cascading land surface hazards. Earth’s surface is continually shaped by a range of natural processes, from slow erosion to sudden disasters like earthquakes and floods. Notably, one hazardous event can trigger a series of subsequent, interrelated disasters, or ”cascading hazards,” that unfold over timescales ranging from seconds to centuries. However, despite their growing impact on human populations, a comprehensive mechanistic ...

Flipping an evolutionarily disabled switch unlocks ear tissue regeneration in mice

2025-06-26
By flipping an evolutionarily disabled genetic switch involved in Vitamin A metabolism, researchers have enabled ear tissue regeneration in mice. Unlike some animals such as fish and salamanders, mammals have limited capacity to regenerate damaged tissues or organs fully. A variety of strategies have been explored to trigger regeneration in mammals, such as stem cell therapies, gene editing, and electrical stimulation. While these approaches have shown promise, none have fully restored organ function. This is likely ...

Ancient squids dominated the ocean 100 million years ago

2025-06-26
Squids first appeared about 100 million years ago and quickly rose to become dominant predators in the ancient oceans, according to a new study published in the journal Science. A team of researchers from Hokkaido University developed an advanced fossil discovery technique that completely digitizes rocks with all embedded fossils in complete 3D form. It allowed them to identify one thousand fossilized cephalopod beaks hidden inside Late Cretaceous rocks from Japan. Among these small and fragile beaks were 263 squid specimens including about 40 different species that had never been seen before. Squids are rarely preserved as fossils because they don’t have hard shells. ...

Public attitudes around solar geoengineering become less politically partisan with more familiarity

2025-06-26
Public attitudes around solar geoengineering become less politically partisan with more familiarity, suggesting that increasing public awareness of the technology could foster bipartisan engagement. ### Article URL: https://plos.io/4elOWIw Article Title: Political ideology and views toward solar geoengineering in the United States Author Countries: United Kingdom, United States Funding: RMA and BM's work is supported by Caltech’s Resnick Sustainability Institute. DE's work on this ...

COVID-19 pandemic significantly eroded American public’s trust in US public health institutions like the CDC, shows longitudinal assessment from 2020-2024

2025-06-26
Four discrete cross-sectional surveys of US adults from 2020-2024 reveal US adults reporting high confidence in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) dropped from 82 percent in February 2020 to a low of 56 percent in June 2022, according to a study published June 26, 2025 in the open-access journal PLOS Global Public Health by Amyn A. Malik and colleagues from UT Southwestern Medical Center, United States. Surveys have shown the US public’s trust in public health entities has decreased since the COVID-19 pandemic reached the United States in 2020. This study is ...

Extreme droughts in LMICs are associated with increased sexual violence against girls and young women

2025-06-26
Extreme droughts in LMICs are associated with increased sexual violence against girls and young women, emphasizing how climate change can indirectly exacerbate social vulnerabilities. ### Article URL: https://plos.io/4liX0Me   Article Title: Extreme drought and sexual violence against adolescent girls and young women: A multi-country population-based study  Author Countries: Australia, France, Indonesia, Namibia, Senegal, South Africa, United States Funding: Funding from the Healthy Environments and ...

Scientists capture slow-motion earthquake in action

2025-06-26
Scientists for the first time have detected a slow slip earthquake in motion during the act of releasing tectonic pressure on a major fault zone at the bottom of the ocean. The slow earthquake was recorded spreading along the tsunami-generating portion of the fault off the coast of Japan, behaving like a tectonic shock absorber. Researchers from The University of Texas at Austin described the event as the slow unzipping of the fault line between two of the Earth’s tectonic plates. Their results were published in Science. “It's like a ripple moving across the plate interface,” said Josh Edgington, who conducted the work as a doctoral student ...

When ideas travel further than people

2025-06-26
The transition to agriculture and a sedentary lifestyle is one of the great turning points in human history. Yet how this Neolithic way of life spread from the Fertile Crescent across Anatolia and into the Aegean has been hotly debated. A Turkish-Swiss team offers important new insights, by combining archaeology and genetics in an innovative way. How open are people to experimenting with new ways of life? Did farming spread from its origins in Anatolia to neighboring regions by farmers migrating? Or ...

British ash woodland is evolving resistance to ash dieback

2025-06-26
Scientists at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew and Queen Mary University of London have discovered that a new generation of ash trees, growing naturally in woodland, exhibits greater resistance to the disease compared to older trees. They find that natural selection is acting upon thousands of locations within the ash tree DNA, driving the evolution of resistance. The study, published in Science, offers renewed hope for the future of ash trees in the British landscape and provides compelling evidence for a long-standing prediction of Darwinian theory. Ash dieback, caused by the fungus Hymenoscyphus fraxineus, arrived in Britain in 2012, prompting an emergency COBRA meeting. The ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

National Multiple Sclerosis Society awards Dr. Manuel A. Friese the 2025 Barancik Prize for Innovation in MS Research

PBM profits obscured by mergers and accounting practices, USC Schaeffer white paper shows

Breath carries clues to gut microbiome health

New study links altered cellular states to brain structure

Palaeontology: Ancient giant kangaroos could hop to it when they needed to

Decoded: How cancer cells protect themselves from the immune system

ISSCR develops roadmap to accelerate pluripotent stem cell-derived therapies to patients

New study shows gut microbiota directly regulates intestinal stem cell aging

Leading cancer deaths in people younger than 50 years

Rural hospital bypass by patients with commercial health insurance

Jumping giants: Fossils show giant prehistoric kangaroos could still hop

Missing Medicare data alters hospital penalties, study finds

Experimental therapy targets cancer’s bodyguards, turning foe to friend to eliminate tumors

Discovery illuminates how inflammatory bowel disease promotes colorectal cancer

Quality and quantity? The clinical significance of myosteatosis in various liver diseases

Expert consensus on clinical applications of fecal microbiota transplantation for chronic liver disease (2025 edition)

Insilico Medicine to present three abstracts at the 2026 Crohn’s & Colitis Congress highlighting clinical, preclinical safety, and efficacy data for ISM5411, a novel gut-restricted PHD1/2 inhibitor fo

New imaging technology detects early signs of heart disease through the skin

Resurrected ancient enzyme offers new window into early Earth and the search for life beyond it

People with obesity may have a higher risk of dementia

Insilico Medicine launches science MMAI gym to train frontier LLMs into pharmaceutical-grade scientific engines

5 pre-conference symposia scheduled ahead of International Stroke Conference 2026

To explain or not? Need for AI transparency depends on user expectation

Global prevalence, temporal trends, and associated mortality of bacterial infections in patients with liver cirrhosis

Scientists discover why some Central Pacific El Niños die quickly while others linger for years

CNU research explains how boosting consumer trust unlocks the $4 billion market for retired EV batteries

Reimagining proprioception: when biology meets technology

Chungnam National University study finds climate adaptation can ease migration pressures in Africa

A cigarette compound-induced tumor microenvironment promotes sorafenib resistance in hepatocellular carcinoma via the 14-3-3η-modified tumor-associated proteome

Brain network disorders study provides insights into the role of molecular chaperones in neurodegenerative diseases

[Press-News.org] Hadean-age rocks preserved in the Nuvvuagittuq Greenstone Belt, Canada
Summary author: Walter Beckwith