Questions about chemistry during Earth's formation & early bombardment
In another newsgroup some questions arose which we thought might be
better answered by experts frequenting these newsgroups. See the
following URL for critical point in that other thread:
http://www.google.com/groups?selm=c7778g%24a3m%241%40darwin.ediacara.org
The general topic is natural processes early in Earth's
history that might have produced large amounts of
certain chemicals useful for respiration by early life
and pre-life.
Summary of specific questions that arose there:
Mostly for sci.geo.geology,alt.sci.planetary:
- During formation of Earth by ac***ulating
planetesimals, both regular ones that were in Solar
orbit, and specific debris from the Mars-size collision
that swiped out a big chunk of the Earth's early mantle
to form a thick ring around Earth part of which formed
the Moon: As iron settled toward the center of Earth
and silicates floated toward the surface, at what rate
would H2 gas liberated from the iron etc. as it changed
temperature and pressure have seeped upward for
hundreds of millions of years after the Earth got cool
enough for the first oceans to form?
Mostly for sci.chem:
- What happens when a smaller iron-nickel meteor
strikes an atmosphere of N2, CO2, and H2O. Would you
will get a rain-out of a complex mix of ferrocyanides
and nickel carbonyls, along with some finely divided
nickel metal?
Mostly for sci.chem:
- When a large carbonaceous asteroid/comet hits early
Earth, would the central portion release much of its
oxygen, leaving mostly unoxidized carbon? Then later as
it was exposed to the early CO2 and H2O atmosphere, and
disturbed by volcanic heat, would the material react
with the atmosphere to produce a lot of carbon
monoxide?
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