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Oldest Rock On Earth Confirmed To Be Over 4 Billion Years Old

Oldest Rock On Earth Confirmed To Be Over 4 Billion Years Old

NDTV07-07-2025
Ottawa:
Earth formed about 4.6 billion years ago, during the geological eon known as the Hadean. The name "Hadean" comes from the Greek god of the underworld, reflecting the extreme heat that likely characterized the planet at the time.
By 4.35 billion years ago, the Earth might have cooled down enough for the first crust to form and life to emerge.
However, very little is known about this early chapter in Earth's history, as rocks and minerals from that time are extremely rare. This lack of preserved geological records makes it difficult to reconstruct what the Earth looked like during the Hadean Eon, leaving many questions about its earliest evolution unanswered.
We are part of a research team that has confirmed the oldest known rocks on Earth are located in northern Québec. Dating back more than four billion years, these rocks provide a rare and invaluable glimpse into the origins of our planet.
Remains from the Hadean Eon
The Hadean Eon is the first period in the geological timescale, spanning from Earth's formation 4.6 billion years ago and ending around 4.03 billion years ago.
The oldest terrestrial materials ever dated by scientists are extremely rare zircon minerals that were discovered in western Australia. These zircons were formed as early as 4.4 billion years ago, and while their host rock eroded away, the durability of zircons allowed them to be preserved for a long time.
Studies of these zircon minerals has given us clues about the Hadean environment, and the formation and evolution of Earth's oldest crust. The zircons' chemistry suggests that they formed in magmas produced by the melting of sediments deposited at the bottom of an ancient ocean. This suggests that the zircons are evidence that the Hadean Eon cooled rapidly, and liquid water oceans were formed early on.
Other research on the Hadean zircons suggests that the Earth's earliest crust was mafic (rich in magnesium and iron). Until recently, however, the existence of that crust remained to be confirmed.
In 2008, a study led by one of us - associate professor Jonathan O'Neil (then a McGill University doctoral student) - proposed that rocks of this ancient crust had been preserved in northern Québec and were the only known vestige of the Hadean.
Since then, the age of those rocks - found in the Nuvvuagittuq Greenstone Belt - has been controversial and the subject of ongoing scientific debate.
'Big, old solid rock'
The Nuvvuagittuq Greenstone Belt is located in the northernmost region of Québec, in the Nunavik region above the 55th parallel. Most of the rocks there are metamorphosed volcanic rocks, rich in magnesium and iron. The most common rocks in the belt are called the Ujaraaluk rocks, meaning "big old solid rock" in Inuktitut.
The age of 4.3 billion years was proposed after variations in neodymium-142 were detected, an isotope produced exclusively during the Hadean through the radioactive decay of samarium-146. The relationship between samarium and neodymium isotope abundances had been previously used to date meteorites and lunar rocks, but before 2008 had never been applied to Earth rocks.
This interpretation, however, was challenged by several research groups, some of whom studied zircons within the belt and proposed a younger age of at most 3.78 billion years, placing the rocks in the Archean Eon instead.
Confirming the Hadean Age
In the summer of 2017, we returned to the Nuvvuagittuq belt to take a closer look at the ancient rocks. This time, we collected intrusive rocks - called metagabbros - that cut across the Ujaraaluk rock formation, hoping to obtain independent age constraints. The fact that these newly studied metagabbros are in intrusion in the Ujaraaluk rocks implies that the latter must be older.
The project was led by masters student Chris Sole at the University of Ottawa, who joined us in the field. Back in the laboratory, we collaborated with French geochronologist Jean-Louis Paquette. Additionally, two undergraduate students - David Benn (University of Ottawa) and Joeli Plakholm (Carleton University) participated to the project.
We combined our field observations with petrology, geochemistry, geochronology and applied two independent samarium-neodymium age dating methods, dating techniques used to assess the absolute ages of magmatic rocks, before they became metamorphic rocks. Both assessments yielded the same result: the intrusive rocks are 4.16 billion years old.
The oldest rocks
Since these metagabbros cut across the Ujaraaluk formation, the Ujaraaluk rocks must be even older, placing them firmly in the Hadean Eon.
Studying the Nuvvuagittuq rocks, the only preserved rocks from the Hadean, provides a unique opportunity to learn about the earliest history of our planet. They can help us understand how the first continents formed, and how and when Earth's environment evolved to become habitable.
(Disclaimer Statement: Hanika Rizo receives funding from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC).
Jonathan O'Neil receives funding from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada.)
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Sri Krishna classifies a tri-fold structure of many of his essential concepts, such as the triune path of Jnana-Karma and Bhakti, and the three types of knowledge, three kinds of action, three types of understanding and even three types of happiness in the 18th chapter, and these elements correspond to the three gunas that underline the play of Prakriti, or the principle of manifestation in Sankhya Yoga. Number 9 is often employed metaphorically. For example, the body is described as the 'city of nine gates' in chapter 5. Other symbolic use of numbers such as 1000 appear in chapter 11 to describe the dazzling manifestation of Sri Krishna's Vishvaroopa. There may be more as our AI system tells us: 'Some intriguing patterns emerge when looking at the proportions and sequence of verses in the Gita." 'Golden Ratio in Structure: It has been observed that the most climactic chapter – Chapter 11, where Arjuna witnesses Krishna's universal cosmic form (viśvarūpa) – occurs about 61 per cent of the way through the 18-chapter text. Chapter 11/18 is approximately 0.611 of the way in, which is remarkably close to the golden ratio (≈0.618). By verse count, too, the revelation of the cosmic form falls in the general vicinity of the 432nd verse out of 700 (around 61.7 per cent) — not exact, but notably close. This could be coincidental, but it does mirror a common storytelling technique of placing a dramatic 'golden climax" about two-thirds through a work. The fact that viśvarūpa darśana is the Gita's emotional and philosophical high point lends credence to the idea that the text intentionally peaks around the golden-section division. In other words, the narrative pacing aligns with an aesthetically pleasing ratio. 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This even, steady meter lends a rhythmic and almost mathematical cadence to the entire text. Each śloka can be seen as a couplet of two 16-syllable lines, giving the discourse a structured flow. This consistency is analogous to a piece of music maintaining a time signature – it imposes an underlying order on the content. The Gita occasionally uses other meters for special verses (some verses in Chapter 11 use triṣṭubh meter, 44 syllables, to convey the grandeur of the scene), but by and large the metrical discipline is maintained. The uniform meter might not be a 'code," but it is a designed pattern that aids memorization and recitation, reflecting the oral mathematicality of Sanskrit prosody" There is more. Mantric repetitions, alliteration, sound patterns, puns and double meanings, structured lists, recurring phrases or formulae, etc. It was impressive to have our AI application decode another aspect of The Literary Genius of the Gita. It concludes, 'In essence, the Gita's linguistic fabric is highly patterned, but these patterns serve didactic and emphasis purposes more than hiding secret messages. The 'code' of the Gita's language is in its mantra-like quality — through repetition, parallelism, and enumeration, it imprints ideas on the mind. For example, by the end, the reader has heard dharma dozens of times, yoga in many compounds, the refrain of 'surrender' in various forms — a bit like a musical theme recurring in different keys. This can be likened to a computational algorithm where key variables (dharma, atman, yoga, bhakti, etc) are revisited in multiple contexts, steadily building a complete picture. Notably, when comparing to the idea of a 'Plato code' (where a hidden musical-temporal structure was proposed in Plato's texts), the Gita's approach to encoding wisdom is more overtly structured rather than cryptographically hidden. It uses the natural Sanskrit propensity for symmetry and repetition as its 'code', making the text rhythmic, memorable, and conceptually clear." Indeed, the Gita is an intriguing work. There is much more hidden in its short review of the entire gamut of Indian darshana than is visible on a surface view. It is my hope that we uncover this multi-dimensionality and let it reveal the cryptic, the occult and esoteric aspects of its message. It is a 'highly ordered work', as our AI says, but there is a lot of method in its inspiration. Perhaps that is the great and open secret that invites us repeatedly to its mystery and genius. (This research was conducted using a novel, fine-tuned large language model [LLM] with expertise in Sanskrit literature, Hindu philosophy, and symbolic mathematics, combined with Python-based computational tools for structural and numerical analysis, including verse distribution mapping and golden ratio detection.) top videos View all (AI analytics was done by Ed Laughman, who attended medical school in Jena, Germany, before discovering a passion for healthcare technology. He has 15 years of experience in AI, machine learning, mathematics, and modern computation.) Pariksith Singh is author, poet, philosopher and medical practitioner based in Florida. Views expressed in the above piece are personal and solely those of the author. They do not necessarily reflect News18's views. view comments Location : New Delhi, India, India First Published: July 27, 2025, 12:05 IST News opinion Opinion | The Mathematics Of The Gita Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. 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