yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Earth used to look like Mars. Here’s why that changed. | Robert Hazen


2m read
·Nov 3, 2024

  • I am a mineralogist. I love minerals, and they're so important in our lives. Virtually all the raw materials we use for technology, for our automobiles, for agriculture, indeed every living thing, depends on minerals. But what else? Minerals tell stories because they're incredibly information-rich.

Every mineral is a time capsule, and they tell us about the four and a half billion-year history of our planet. So we wouldn't be here, we wouldn't be able to talk about minerals if it weren't for the minerals themselves. Minerals were fundamental to the origin of life. There were all sorts of key steps, catalysis, reactance, protective surfaces that you couldn't have made life's chemistry without those special characteristics of minerals.

What we've learned—and this is astonishing— is that Earth has gone through these complete changes in character, in color. Earth started off as a black planet covered with basalt, and then the rains came and the oceans came and Earth transformed to a blue planet where it was covered by an ocean. Then we started plate tectonics, a process by which the near surface and the deep interior are churned in a way that creates gray continents of granite.

Life evolves to produce an oxygen-rich atmosphere that rusts the planet and you get a red planet now, much like Mars, but that's what our continents would've looked like 2 billion years ago. Then we went through periods of getting very hot and very cold. And in the coldest stages, we think the entire planet was covered by the white mineral, ice. The ice melted and the continents became green because life learned to live on land.

And so you now had to green planet, and you also had all kinds of biomineralization. We had shells and we had teeth and we had bones that showed the struggle for survival in life, but that struggle involved minerals as well. So for that entire four and a half billion history, we've seen the co-evolution of the geosphere and life—the abundant life we see on Earth today.

More Articles

View All
Why Boredom is Good For You
Part of this video was sponsored by LastPass. Stick around to the end for a word from our sponsor. In a recent study, participants were placed in a room for between 6 and 15 minutes. They were given nothing except a button that they knew would shock them…
NASA's Urgent Message | Years of Living Dangerously
I think the future of agriculture in California is really at risk today. Don Cheadle was here, and we were talking about issues of satellite observations of groundwater depletion and how it’s happening in California. Over the last few years, California’s …
Identifying symmetrical figures | Math | 4th grade | Khan Academy
Which shapes are symmetrical? To answer this, we need to know what it means for a shape to be symmetrical. A shape is symmetrical if it has at least one line of symmetry. A line of symmetry, and now that answer is only helpful if we know what a line of sy…
Graph labels and scales | Modeling | Algebra II | Khan Academy
We’re told that Chloe takes a slice of pizza out of the freezer and leaves it on the counter to defrost. She models the relationship between the temperature ( p ) of the pizza, this seems like it’s going to be interesting. The temperature ( p ) of the piz…
The Man Who Hated The World (Animated Short Story)
The mind is its own place, and in itself can make a Heaven of Hell, a Hell of Heaven. John Milton. In a dirty prison cell, there lived a man who dedicated his whole life to isolating himself from the world. As opposed to most prisoners, he wasn’t put the…
Gov Of The Gaps (Mirror)
We’re getting a lot of disease in our town lately, and we don’t know how to stop it. Does anyone have any ideas? “Yes, I have an idea.” “Mr. Scientist, go ahead.” “Yes, I have this theory. You see, that disease is caused by teeny tiny little life forms…