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28 - Geochemical Earth model

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 September 2009

Igor Tolstikhin
Affiliation:
Kola Scientific Centre, Russian Academy of Sciences
Jan Kramers
Affiliation:
Universität Bern, Switzerland
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Summary

Introduction to geochemical modelling

Generally, quantitative models are considered as the most advanced, final, step in the interpretation of experimental and analytical data. Three types of chemical evolutionary Earth model may be distinguished (in order of increasing complexity): (1) transport chemical models envisaging distinct homogeneous reservoirs and applying mainly mass-balance considerations (e.g. O'Nions et al., 1979; Jacobsen and Wasserburg, 1979); (2) transport chemical models that take the temporal preservation of chemical and isotopic heterogeneities within reservoirs into account, highlighting the behaviour of the species within each reservoir (Kellogg et al., 2002); (3) physical models with chemical tracers in them (Christensen and Hofmann, 1994; van Keken et al., 2002; Samuel and Farnetani, 2003).

The models are best applied progressively, increasing the complexity only when simpler approaches and their deficiencies are understood. In this chapter we discuss the simplest model involving the transfer of material and species between distinct principal long-lived terrestrial reservoirs. The model includes two major stages of Earth history, accretion (Chapters 18 to 20) and post-accretion evolution. The data related to the isotopic systems modelled, 244Pu–Xe(Pu), 129I–129Xe(I), 40K–40Ar, U–Th–He–Ne, 147Sm–143Nd, 87Rb–87Sr, 176Lu–176Hf and 87Rb–87Sr, were discussed in the previous chapter.

It should be emphasized that neither the model itself (Section 28.2) nor its reference solution (Section 28.3) are unique: they only illustrate one possible way to describe the Earth's materials, and the processes transferring and developing them, within the frame of a self-consistent semiquantitative concept, applying reasonable input parameters.

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Chapter
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The Evolution of Matter
From the Big Bang to the Present Day
, pp. 427 - 441
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2008

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