Origin and evolution of the hydrosphere
It is not very likely that the total amount of water at Earth’s surface has changed significantly over geologic time. Based on the ages of meteorites, Earth is thought to be 4.6 billion years old. The oldest rocks known are 3.9 billion to 4.0 billion years old, and these rocks, though altered by post-depositional processes, show signs of having been deposited in an environment containing water. There is no direct evidence for water for the period between 4.6 billion and 3.9–4.0 billion years ago. Thus, ideas concerning the early history of the hydrosphere are closely linked to theories about the origin of Earth.
Earth is thought to have accreted from a cloud of particles around the Sun. This gaseous matter condensed into small particles that coalesced to form a protoplanet, which in turn grew by the gravitational attraction of more particulates. Some of these particles had compositions similar to that of carbonaceous chondrite meteorites, which may contain up to 20 percent water. Heating of this initially cool, unsorted conglomerate by the decay of radioactive elements and the conversion of kinetic and potential energy to heat resulted in the development of Earth’s liquid iron core and the gross internal zonation of the planet (i.e., differentiation into core, mantle, and crust). It has been concluded that Earth’s core formed over a period of about 500 million years. It is likely that core formation resulted in the escape of an original primitive atmosphere and its replacement by one derived from the loss of volatile substances from the planetary interior (see evolution of the atmosphere).
At an early stage, Earth thus did not have water or water vapour at its surface, and the topic of how water arrived on Earth’s surface is a matter of substantial debate. Some scientists argue that much of the water on the planet was delivered by comet and meteor impacts. Both of these celestial objects have been shown to contain ice. Other scientists claim that most of Earth’s water came from chemical reactions within the planet’s interior. Once the planet’s surface had cooled sufficiently, water contained in the minerals of the accreted material and released at depth could escape to the surface and, instead of being lost to space, cooled and condensed to form the initial hydrosphere. A large cool Earth most certainly served as a better trap for water than a small hot body because the lower the temperature, the less likelihood for water vapour to escape, and the larger the planetary mass, the stronger its gravitational attraction for water vapour. Whether most of the degassing took place during core formation or shortly thereafter or whether there has been significant degassing of Earth’s interior throughout geologic time remains uncertain. It is likely that the hydrosphere attained its present volume early in Earth’s history, and since that time there have been only small losses and gains. Gains would be from continuous degassing of Earth; the present degassing rate of juvenile water has been determined as being only 0.3 cubic km (about 0.07 cubic mile) per year. Water loss in the upper atmosphere is by photodissociation, the breakup of water vapour molecules into hydrogen and oxygen due to the energy of ultraviolet light. The hydrogen is lost to space and the oxygen remains behind. Only about 4.8 × 10−4 cubic km (about 0.0005 cubic mile) of water vapour is presently destroyed each year by photodissociation. This low rate can be readily explained: the very cold temperatures of the upper atmosphere result in a cold trap at an altitude of about 15 km (about 9.3 miles), where most of the water vapour condenses and returns to lower altitudes, thereby escaping photodissociation. Since the early formation of the hydrosphere, the amount of water vapour in the atmosphere has been regulated by the temperature of Earth’s surface—hence its radiation balance. Higher temperatures imply higher concentrations of atmospheric water vapour, while lower temperatures suggest lower atmospheric levels.
The early hydrosphere
The gases released from Earth during its early history, including water vapour, have been called excess volatiles because their masses cannot be accounted for simply by rock weathering. These volatiles are thought to have formed the early atmosphere of Earth. At an initial crustal temperature of about 600 °C (about 1,100 °F), almost all of these compounds, including water (H2O), would have been in the atmosphere. The sequence of events that occurred as the crust cooled is difficult to reconstruct. Below 100 °C (212 °F) all of the water would have condensed, and the acid gases would have reacted with the original igneous crustal minerals to form sediments and an initial hydrosphere that was dominated by a salty ocean. If the chemical reaction rates are assumed to have been slow relative to cooling, an atmosphere of 600 °C would have contained, together with other compounds, water vapour, carbon dioxide, and hydrogen chloride (HCl) in a ratio of 20:3:1 and cooled to the critical temperature of water (that is, the temperature above which a compound cannot remain as a liquid—i.e., 374 °C [705 °F]). The water therefore would have condensed into an early hot ocean. At this stage, the hydrogen chloride would have dissolved in the ocean (about one mole per litre), but most of the carbon dioxide would have remained in the atmosphere, with only about 0.5 mole per litre in the ocean water. This early acid ocean would have reacted vigorously with crustal minerals, dissolving out silica and cations and creating a residue composed principally of aluminous clay minerals that would form the sediments of the early ocean basins.
This is one of several possible pathways for the early surface of Earth. Whatever the actual case, after Earth’s surface had cooled to 100 °C, it would have taken only a short time for the remaining acid gases to be consumed in reactions involving igneous rock minerals. The presence of cyanobacteria (e.g., blue-green algae) in the fossil record of rocks older than three billion years attests to the fact that Earth’s surface had cooled to temperatures lower than 100 °C by this time, and neutralization of the original acid volatiles had taken place (see acid-base reaction). It is possible, however, that, because of increased greenhouse gas concentrations early in the Archean Eon (4.0 billion to 2.5 billion years ago), Earth’s surface could still have been warmer than today (see climate change: climate change through geologic time).
If most of the degassing of primary volatile substances from Earth’s interior occurred early, the chloride released by the reaction of hydrochloric acid with rock minerals would be found in the oceans or in evaporite deposits, and the oceans would have a salinity and volume comparable to that of today. This conclusion is based on the assumption that there has been no drastic change in the ratios of volatiles released through geologic time. The overall generalized reaction indicative of the chemistry leading to the formation of the early oceans can be written in the form: primary igneous rock minerals + acid volatiles + H2O → sedimentary rocks + oceans + atmosphere. It should be noted from this equation that, if all the acid volatiles and H2O were released early in the history of Earth and in the proportions found today, then the total original sedimentary rock mass-produced would be equal to that of the present, and ocean salinity and volume would be close to those of today as well. If, on the other hand, degassing were linear with time, then the sedimentary rock mass would have accumulated at a linear rate, as would have oceanic volume. The salinity of the oceans, however, would remain nearly the same if the ratios of volatiles degassed did not change with time. The most likely situation is the one presented here—namely, that major degassing occurred early in Earth’s history, after which minor amounts of volatiles were released episodically or continuously for the remainder of geologic time. The salt content of the oceans based on the constant proportions of volatiles released would depend primarily on the ratio of sodium chloride locked up in evaporites to that dissolved in the oceans. If all the sodium chloride in evaporites were added to the oceans today, the salinity would be approximately doubled. This value gives a sense of the maximum salinity that the oceans could have attained throughout geologic time.
One component absent from the early Earth’s surface was free oxygen; it would not have been a constituent released from the cooling crust. Early production of oxygen was by the photodissociation of water in Earth’s atmosphere, a process that was triggered by the absorption of the Sun’s ultraviolet radiation. The reaction is H2O (liquid) + hν → H2 (gas) + O2 (gas) in which hν represents the photon of ultraviolet light. The hydrogen produced would escape into space, while the oxygen would react with the early reduced gases by reactions such as 2H2S + 3O2 → 2SO2 + 2H2O. Oxygen production by photodissociation gave the early reduced atmosphere a start toward present-day conditions, but it was not until the appearance of photosynthetic organisms approximately three billion years ago that oxygen could accumulate in Earth’s atmosphere at a rate sufficient to give rise to today’s oxygenated environment. The photosynthetic reaction leading to oxygen production is .