Eoarchean 

Eoarchean eon
3800 - 3600 million years ago
The geological eras
view • discuss • 
-4500 —
-4000 —
-3500 —
-3000 —
-2500 —
-2000 —
-1500 —
-1000 —
-500 —
0 —
Scale:
Millions of years

In the geologic record the Eoarchean erathem (pronounced /ˌiːoʊɑrˈkiːən/, also spelled Eoarchaean) and the Eoarchean era in the geologic timescale correspond to one another in the dual system of classification of rock strata laid down beginning 4000 Ma to 3600 Ma (million years ago).

Contents

It was formerly officially unnamed and usually referred to as the first part of the Early Archean (now an obsolescent name) together with the later Paleoarchean era. It is the first part of the Archaean Eon, preceded by the "informal" Hadean eon, during which the Earth was considered to be essentially molten.

The International Commission on Stratigraphy currently does not recognize the lower boundary of the era which they've provisionally placed at 4000 Ma1 nor that of the preceding Hadean Eon.

The Eoarchean was followed by the Paleoarchean era.

The name comes from two Greek words: eos (dawn) and archios (ancient). The first supercontinent Vaalbara appeared around the end of this period around 3600 ma.

Some interpretations of the the fossil record suggest prokaryote forms may have evolved from protobionts late in this era.

Also the oldest rock formation on earth the Isua greenstone belt also appeared during the Eoarchean around 3.8 Billion years ago.

See also

e  h
Units in geochronology and stratigraphy2
Segments of rock (strata) in chronostratigraphy Periods of time in geochronology Notes
Eonothem
Eon
4 total, half a billion years or more
Erathem
Era
12 total, several hundred million years
System
Period
21 major and 2 minor
Series
Epoch
48 total, tens of millions of years
Stage
Age
Over 100, each spanning millions of years
Chronozone
Chron
Generic term for any identifiable time period; not necessarily part of a hierarchy


Notes, links and references

External links

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ Recent ICS provisional chart
  2. ^ International Commission on Stratigraphy. "International Stratigraphic Chart". Retrieved on 2008-06-17.
Archean eon
Eoarchean Paleoarchean Mesoarchean Neoarchean
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