Abstract
Bolide impact is a ubiquitous geological process in the Solar System, which produced craters and basins filled with impact melt sheets on the terrestrial planets. However, it remains controversial whether these sheets were able to undergo large-scale igneous differentiation, or not. Here, we report on the discovery of large discrete bodies of melanorites that occur throughout almost the entire stratigraphy of the 1.85-billion-year-old Sudbury Igneous Complex (SIC) – the best exposed impact melt sheet on Earth – and use them to reaffirm that conspicuous norite-gabbro-granophyre stratigraphy of the SIC is produced by fractional crystallization of an originally homogeneous impact melt of granodioritic composition. This implies that more ancient and compositionally primitive Hadean impact melt sheets on the Earth and other terrestrial planets also underwent large-volume igneous differentiation. The near-surface differentiation of these giant impact melt sheets may therefore have contributed to the evolution and lithological diversity of the proto-crust on terrestrial planets.
Similar content being viewed by others
Introduction
Hypervelocity impacts affected the early crustal evolution of all the terrestrial planets, predominantly though the formation of large multi-ring craters and basins1. Such impacts resulted in melting of target rocks to form superheated impact melt sheets up to tens of km thick and thousands of km in diameter that were largely contained within the basins. There is currently major disagreement as to the initial nature and subsequent evolution of these voluminous impact melt sheets2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19, especially those within the multi-ring basins on the Moon10,11,12,14. These are not, however, yet directly accessible and, therefore, the ground-truth data on the nature and differentiation of the impact melt sheets on the Moon and the other terrestrial planets is exclusively provided by terrestrial data1. The melt body used as the closest terrestrial analog of these voluminous impact melts sheets is the Sudbury Igneous Complex (SIC) in Canada—the largest, best exposed and accessible impact melt sheet on Earth2,3,4 (Fig. 1). The SIC resulted from a large impact ~1.85 billion years ago20, which produced a superheated (at least, 1700–2000 °C)8,21,22 melt sheet of granodioritic composition up to 5 km thick2,3, with an estimated original volume of >104 km3. The SIC shows a remarkable magmatic stratigraphy, with a basal layer of mafic composition (norite) overlain by a felsic (granophyre) layer, with a transitional (quartz gabbro) phase (Fig. 1). This compositional stratigraphy has been traditionally interpreted as resulting from internal differentiation of an originally homogeneous impact melt sheet2,3,4,5,6, but this hypothesis has been challenged.
It has been argued, however, that internal differentiation of granodioritic melt in the SIC either cannot be effective15,16,17 or it is even totally impossible18,19. Alternative models attribute the stratigraphy of the SIC to stratification of the impact melt sheet into separate melt layers prior to onset of crystallization, with an upper felsic one crystallizing granophyre and the lower mafic one producing norite. These scenarios might involve two melts of different origin, one from the crust and another from the mantle15,16; alternatively impact-induced density stratification into a lower layer with mafic clasts and the upper layer with felsic clasts17, and impact-induced melting that gave rise to heterogeneous emulsion of immiscible liquids which segregated into the upper felsic layer and a lower mafic layer18,19,23. Such models suggest that the impact of large bolides does not readily cause homogenization of melted targeted crustal rocks, and that superheated melt in impact-generated sheets does not undergo internal differentiation into compositionally stratified magmatic bodies. If correct, such hypotheses nullify likely contributions of impact cratering processes to the evolution and diversification of melt lithologies in the early crust on terrestrial planets7,8,9,10,11,12,14,24,25,26.
Here we reassess models for the formation of the SIC following the discovery of discrete bodies (10 to 100s meters in size) of melanorites in the SIC. These bodies occur throughout much of the stratigraphy of the SIC and are, even locally, developed along its roof. Our field and geochemical observations indicate that the melanorites are likely fragments of a roof (mela)noritic sequence of the SIC which initially grew from the top of the melt sheet downwards but was later disrupted and collapsed as blocks onto the temporary floor. The existence of an original (mela)noritic sequence refutes the two-layer stratification models because they only allow granophyre to crystallize from the roof. The contemporaneous inward growth of similar (mela)noritic sequences from the base and roof of the SIC indicates that, in response to complete mixing of melted target rocks by a bolide impact, the Sudbury impact melt sheet was originally homogeneous. This implies that the spectacular compositional variations with stratigraphic height in the SIC are the result of fractional crystallization. An important implication is that more ancient and primitive Hadean impact melt sheets—comparable in size to the lunar ones10,11,12,14—on the early Earth and other terrestrial planets would also have undergone near-surface, large-volume differentiation to produce compositionally stratified bodies. Foundering of the lower ultramafic cumulates of these bodies may have contributed to the lithological diversification (e.g., formation of the considerable volumes of mafic-to-felsic rocks) during the early crustal evolution of the terrestrial planets24,25,26, in addition to endogenic geologic processes involving recycling of primitive basaltic crust by deep geodynamic processes27,28,29,30,31,32.
Results
A first melanorite body found in the SIC
The South Range of the SIC (Fig. 1a) consists of five major rock units (from base to top): (1) Sublayer33 representing a discontinuous group of magmatic breccias in depressions which contain magmatic Ni–Cu–PGE sulfide ores and connected in places with radial Offset dykes34; (2) Sublayer norites tending to only occur in the embayments2 developed along the base and made up of cumulus orthopyroxene along with interstitial plagioclase, clinopyroxene and quartz; (3) felsic norite composed of cumulus orthopyroxene and plagioclase with some amount of interstitial clinopyroxene, (4) quartz gabbro characterized by disappearance of orthopyroxene and successive appearance of cumulus clinopyroxene, amphibole, magnetite, ilmenite and apatite; and (5) granophyre characterised by arrival of intergrowths of quartz and potassium feldspar2,3,35 (Fig. 1b). The most recent and puzzling finding in this stratigraphy of the South Range is an abrupt reversal towards more MgO-rich rock compositions that manifests as a horizon of medium-grained, sulphide-bearing melanonorite ~1.3 km above the base of the SIC in the Creighton area2,3 (Figs. 1, 2a and 3). The term melanorite was introduced to emphasize a higher amount of orthopyroxene (from 23 to 30–35 vol.%) compared to more normal felsic norite (from 6 to 8–9 wt.%)2,3. Unlike adjacent noritic rocks that are almost devoid of sulphides, melanorites commonly contains blebs of pyrrhotite-pentlandite-chalcopyrite sulphides (up to 1 wt.%; S = 0.15–0.30 wt.%) (Fig. 3).
The occurrence of the sulphide-bearing melanorite so high in the sequence of felsic norites is an anomaly, as rocks of such primitive composition with sulphides were believed to occur exclusively at the very base of the SIC, where they overly the Sublayer2,3,33 (Fig. 1b). We have documented that this reversal along the Creighton traverse does not form a continuous layer in the magmatic stratigraphy of the SIC but is the result of a discrete body of melanorite (~60–80 m), which terminates along strike in both directions (Fig. 2a). Geochemical mapping of the same locality by other researchers yielded similar results36. No other melanorite bodies have been found within 1.5 km along strike from this melanorite body. It should be noted that visual identification of this melanorite body in the field is quite difficult. Even petrography is not entirely diagnostic. Geochemistry appears to be the best tool to allow the confident identification and mapping of the melanorite body. This explains why, despite an intensive study of the SIC for more than a century, this melanorite body has been overlooked.
New melanorite bodies revealed by geochemical mapping
We have undertaken several geochemical traverses and detailed mapping involving more than 600 whole-rock chemical analyses. This allowed us to document a number of new bodies of melanorites at other stratigraphic levels of the South Range. In particular, one such melanorite body (~50–60 m) occurs at ~0.7 km from the base of the SIC within the lower portion of norite at Lockerby (Figs. 1 and 2b). Another and, so far, the largest (~400–700 m) is located at ~2.7 km above the base within quartz gabbro in the Elm area (Figs. 1 and 2c). This melanorite (Fig. 4) is medium-grained rock with blebs of sulphides clearly visible on a weathered surface. Main minerals are euhedral/subhedral orthopyroxene (up to 36 vol. %) as prismatic crystals and the euhedral/subhedral plagioclase (up to 50 vol. %) as large, tabular grains. Both orthopyroxene and plagioclase are highly altered. This body is rich in MgO (up to 8–9 wt.%) and poor in TiO2 (0.3–0.6 wt.%) and is, therefore, easily identifiable geochemically on the background of host MgO-poor and TiO2-rich quartz gabbro (Fig. 5). Again, the only other rocks in this traverse that have similar composition in terms of MgO and contains blebs of sulphides are Sublayer norites that occur at the very base of the SIC (Fig. 5). Finally, and, perhaps, most unexpectedly, one small melanorite body (up to 7 wt.% MgO) has been found to occur at the very roof of the SIC between underlying granophyre and overlying Onaping Formation in the Creighton area (Figs. 1 and 2d). Unlike melanorite bodies that are sitting in the interior of the SIC, it is distinguished by much finer-grained texture and high aspect ratios (length/width) of plagioclase (Fig. 6) implying a rapid cooling rate. Such discrete bodies of melanorites may be found in the future in the interior of the granophyre zone and in the North and East Range of the SIC (Fig. 1a).
Melanorite bodies are an integral part of the SIC
The chemical and mineralogical similarities of the melanorite bodies to Sublayer norites suggest that they are an integral part of the SIC. This is also strongly supported by the fact that the melanorite bodies are isotopically and geochemically almost indistinguishable from the host rocks of the SIC (Fig. 7). In particular, the geochemical affinity of the melanorite bodies to SIC norite, quartz gabbro and granophyre is evident from the incompatible element ratios (e.g., La/Ga), which are effectively constant in all of these rocks (Fig. 7a). They also have similar primitive mantle-normalized trace element concentration patterns, which show prominent negative Nb, Ta, P, Ti and Lu anomalies (Fig. 7c, d) and their initial 143Nd/144Nd compositions are identical, within error, to the other lithologies of the SIC37,38 (Fig. 7b). Some minor differences between the melanocratic bodies and host noritic rocks in the relative abundance of incompatible elements (e.g., REE) can probably be attributed to a variable amount of interstitial liquid trapped in these rocks.
Discussion
A fundamental prediction of all the models that postulate the separation of the SIC into two melt layers15,16,17,18,19,23 is that (mela)noritic rocks crystallized from the base upwards but not from roof downwards. Only granophyre is supposed to grow at the roof from the upper felsic melt layer. The occurrence of fine-grained melanorite body along the roof of the SIC (Figs. 1, 2d and 6) is thus not compatible with such models. The same is true for the melanorite bodies located in the interior of the SIC. These cannot be attributed to the incorporation into higher levels of the impact melt sheet of neither blocks of mafic target rocks from the basement during an impact17 nor autobrecciated autoliths of solidified Sublayer norites. Such fragments of mafic rocks would have been denser (2.80–2.85 g/cm3)2,18 than the granodioritic impact melt (2.47–2.50 g/cm3)6 and would, therefore, sink, rather than float within it. In addition, the isotopic and geochemical similarities of the melanorite bodies to the hosts rocks (Fig. 7) indicate that these bodies are not xenolithic in origin but belong to intrusive rocks of the SIC. Attempts to explain these bodies in terms of emplacement of impact melt pulses from neighbouring sub-chambers of the SIC39, mixing between adjacent, km-sized convective cells that show differences in degree and/or pathway of differentiation36, or an upward trend towards more primitive MgO-rich composition of rocks2 (Fig. 1b) are also problematic. These models imply that the melanorites should form (semi)continuous layers in the stratigraphy of the SIC, and are, therefore, at odds with the discrete, blocky shape of the melanorite occurrences (Fig. 2).
We conclude that if the large and dense blocks of melanorite could not physically be transferred from below, then the only remaining option is to derive them from above, i.e., by gravity settling from the roof of the SIC. It is inferred that the melanorite bodies are fragments (autoliths) of an original rock sequence of melanoritic rocks that crystallized from the top of the melt sheet downwards, but was disrupted and collapsed onto the temporary floor. Although the roof contact is poorly exposed, we have already identified one site where melanoritic rocks are located close to the roof of the SIC. This small outcrop (~5–7 m, Fig. 2d) is composed of fine-grained melanorite (20 vol. % orthopyroxene; 7 wt.% MgO), which has a striking similarity in terms of their major and trace element compositions (Fig. 7a, d) to the melanorite blocks and the mafic norites overlying the Sublayer, providing direct evidence for an original melanoritic roof sequence. The simultaneous crystallization of (mela)norite from the roof and base of the SIC may have only happened if the entire impact melt sheet was originally homogeneous2,3,4,5,6. If so, it suggests that the spectacular magmatic stratigraphy of the SIC (Fig. 1b) may only reflect its large-scale internal differentiation2,3,4,5,6. Our interpretation of melanorite blocks may seem aggrandized, as no one has ever surmised the prior existence of a roof noritic sequence in the SIC. We would like to stress, however—quite to the contrary—that it is the lack of a roof noritic sequence that should be regarded as an overlooked enigma of the SIC40,41. The SIC is essentially a shallow-level melt body whose predominant cooling from above was facilitated by cold ocean water circulating through the overlying breccia of Onaping Formation40,41,42. This cooling must have almost inevitably resulted in top-down crystallization of the impact melt sheet, coevally with bottom-up crystallization. Such inward crystallization is common for most shallow-level mafic sills (e.g., Palisades43 or Basistoppen44) and even some deeper layered intrusions (e.g., Skaergaard45 or Kiglapait46), and should, therefore, be expected for the near-surface SIC as well.
We thus reaffirm that a large-scale impact, ~1.85 billion years ago, produced the few km thick Sudbury melt sheet, which initially comprised a single layer of superheated and homogeneous melt of granodioritic composition (Fig. 8a, b). The initial homogeneity is indicated by similar ratios and patterns of incompatible elements in the different SIC rocks, including granophyre (Fig. 7a, c). Also indicative of a single melt system are a systematic increase in abundance of REE and the substantial uniformity in REE patterns between the Sudbury lithologies4, remarkably homogeneous incompatible trace element ratios in the entire section (e.g., Ce/Yb, Th/Nd)2 and homogeneity in Os, Pb, Sr and Nd isotope compositions37,38. Some local isotopic heterogeneity reflects differences in the ages of the target rocks47. Upon cooling, the impact layer started crystallizing inwards from upper and lower margins producing orthopyroxene-rich cumulate that subsequently evolves into melanorite owing to post-cumulus crystallization of a large amount of plagioclase-rich interstitial liquid. Rapid cooling and crystallization of the melt along the contact with the cold breccia of the Onaping Formation resulted in the fine-grained texture of roof melanoritic varieties (Figs. 2d and 6). Blebs of sulphides dispersed in melanorites (Figs. 3 and 4) indicate that the impact melt has likely reached sulphide liquid immiscibility before onset of its crystallization. With subsequent arrival of liquidus plagioclase, the orthopyroxene + plagioclase cumulates started to crystallize into felsic norite (Fig. 8c).
We speculate that, if preserved intact, the overall compositional structure of the SIC would be grossly similar to that of the Skaergaard intrusion45, i.e., it would consist of the Layered and Upper Border Series, growing contemporaneously from the roof and floor, exhibiting similar trends of phase crystallization and meeting at the Sandwich Horizon. The Upper Border Series would be about six to seven times thinner than the Layered Series because vigorous thermal convection in the main mass of melt will keep the upper thermal boundary layer thinner than the lower one48. However, such a structure is notably absent from the SIC (Fig. 1b). The most likely reason for this is that the roof sequence of melanorite/felsic norite was not stable and tectonic activity associated with late-stage crater adjustments resulted in their partial dislodgment and collapse, as discrete blocks, on the upwards growing chamber floor (Fig. 8c). The location of melanorite blocks at various stratigraphic levels in the SIC (Figs. 1 and 2) indicates several episodes of roof destruction. The process was still on-going during the formation of quartz gabbro, as indicated from the occurrence of, at least, one melanorite block in these rocks (Figs. 1b and 2c). It is not inconceivable that further searches will result in finding these blocks in the interior of the granophyre as well. This would indicate that the destruction lasted throughout almost the entire crystallization interval of the impact melt sheet. This resulted in nearly complete disappearance of the roof sequence so that the residual felsic liquid came into direct contact with the overlying Onaping Formation (Fig. 8d). The overall thickness of the original noritic roof sequence is difficult to estimate due to its poor preservation. The size of the largest block (Fig. 2c) indicates, however, that the sequence was at least, 400–500 m thick. A detailed re-mapping of the upper part of the SIC is required to evaluate how much of the original noritic sequence is still preserved along the roof. What is clear, however, is that autoliths of the roof sequence may be quite abundant in the SIC and may substantially contribute to the overall thickness of noritic/gabbroic zones by forming ~15 vol. % of the sequence (i.e., 500 m out of 3000–3500 m). One of the future challenges is to define a clear set of textural and chemical criteria, expressly to map these autoliths in the field and laboratory.
Our study thus provides the long-missing field-based evidence to resolve the dilemma regarding the origin of the conspicuous cumulate stratigraphy of the SIC. The data strongly support the Sudbury impact resulting in complete mixing of the melted target rocks to form a homogeneous impact melt sheet and that this melt sheet then underwent effective differentiation to form a prominent compositionally layered body2,3,4,5,6. The conclusion is fully consistent with results of previous phase-equilibria modelling indicating that crystallization sequence, mineral compositional trends and geochemical variations of the SIC can be adequately reproduced by fractional crystallization of a single batch of granodioritic magma5. If even such relatively small-sized melt sheets of quite evolved composition, as the SIC, can undergo differentiation and produce compositionally stratified bodies, then it is logical to assume that this will also occur in much larger terrestrial impact melt sheets of more primitive, mafic/ultramafic composition. The conclusion has potentially important implication with respect to the Hadean era (>3.8 billion years) of Earth evolution. This is the era, when the large multi-ring basins formed on the Moon. An even more massive bombardment must have also occurred on the Earth. With adjustments due to the larger gravitational cross-section, higher impact velocity and planetary gravity on Earth, estimates are approximately 3000 impact craters with diameters >100 km, with the largest impact basin being on the sub-continental scale24,25,49. Models of this bombardment and its effects25,49,50 vary in sophistication but all result in a Hadean Earth where 100% of the surface was covered by impact ejecta and some ~10% by pools of impact melt, with a cumulative volume of ~1011–12 km3. Felsic lithologies in the Hadean proto-crust of the Earth are generally considered to form through deep recycling of primary basaltic rocks by various geodynamic processes27,28,29,30,31,32. This study, however, raises the possibility that the considerable volumes of felsic rocks can be generated at a near-surface environment in the Hadean, through the large-scale differentiation of these voluminous impact melt sheets. Modelling of such a process shows the potential to produce up to 108-9 km3 of compositionally evolved impact melt (comparable to the volume of the present-day continental crust) in large Hadean basins25.
While the differentiated Hadean impact melt pools are expected to have the same inherent density as the precursor target rocks of the Hadean proto-crust, the potential delamination31,51,52 of their lower ultramafic portions could have produced residual blocks of more buoyant, mafic-to-felsic rocks. These blocks could potentially have played a role in the onset and development of the Hadean proto-continental crust24,25,26. We have employed here an original approach by Vaughan et al.10 to illustrate this idea using the crystallization sequences in a pseudoternary phase diagram Fo-An-Qtz (Fig. 9) supplemented by stage-by-stage development of three successive generations of impact melt sheets (Fig. 10). The Hadean proto-crust is considered to be of mafic/ultramafic composition26,53. Its exact composition is unknown and, therefore, for illustration purposes, we use here a hypothetical composition X consisting of 60 wt.% enstatite, 20 wt.% forsterite and 20 wt.% anorthite (Figs. 9a and 10a). Its early melting by bolide impacts followed by igneous differentiation of impact melt sheets along a path olivine, orthopyroxene, orthopyroxene + plagioclase and orthopyroxene + plagioclase + quartz (+clinopyroxene) would produce stratified bodies (Figs. 9b and 10b–c) similar to those of well-known differentiated plutons (e.g. Stillwater and Bushveld Complexes)54. In the earlier-formed layered bodies, the ultramafic cumulates (dunite and orthopyroxenite) will predominate over the mafic-to-felsic ones (norite, quartz gabbro, diorite and granite). The dense ultramafic cumulates (ρ = 3.25 g/cm3 for dunite, and ρ = 3.20 g/cm3 for orthopyroxenite)10 will be gravitationally unstable within the lighter Hadean proto-crust (ρ ~ 3.12 g/cm3). They may therefore dislodge from the complexes and founder in the hot and plastically deformed rocks of the Hadean proto-crust to spread along the paleo Moho51. Multiple re-melting of the Hadean proto-crust together with the mafic-to-felsic cumulates from the preceding melting/crystallization events—expressed graphically as a mixing line between these two end-members (Fig. 9c, e)—would give rise to impact melt sheets with increasingly more evolved composition. Their large-scale differentiation would, therefore, produce stratified bodies with progressively larger proportions of mafic-to-felsic cumulates relative to ultramafic ones (Figs. 9d, e; 10d–i). The foundering of dense ultramafic cumulates would result in accumulation of substantial volumes of mafic-to-felsic rocks (buoyant crustal blocks) in the Hadean proto-crust making it compositionally layered and increasingly more evolved from the base towards the Earth’s surface (Fig. 10a, d, g).
The impact melt sheets are supposed to produce rocks with geochemical features that are characteristic of shallow-level fractional crystallization (e.g. little fractionation of light from heavy REEs and pronounced negative Eu anomalies) of mafic/ultramafic melts in which the low-pressure minerals, such as plagioclase, were important constituents of the fractionating assemblage. This process cannot therefore be responsible for the tonalite–trondhjemite–granodiorite (TTG) suite that dominates the later formed Archaean (<3.8 billion years) crust because these have trace element chemistry (garnet signature) indicating their origin by high pressure geodynamic processes31,32. This prediction is difficult to rigorously test because the Hadean proto-crust was almost completely destroyed during the Moon-forming event when the Earth was impacted by a Mars-sized object55. However, what has survived on the Earth from the Hadean proto-crust appears to be in line with our scenario. In particular, the magnetite-rich gneisses of the Acasta Gneiss Complex, northwest Canada—the only known felsic rocks of Hadean age (~4.02 billion years)—show chemical compositions distinctly different from rocks of the TTG suite. Their chemistry indicates that garnet was not involved in magma genesis or evolution and, instead, plagioclase was a major fractionating mineral56. These felsic gneisses were therefore attributed to such low-pressure processes as shallow-level fractionation of basaltic magma combined with assimilation of hydrothermally altered oceanic crust56 and near-surface partial melting of hydrated basaltic rocks by asteroid impacts26. Our petrogenetic model is yet another possibility. In some respect, it shares features of both approaches—it implies the impact-induced bulk melting of target mafic/ultramafic rocks followed by shallow-level fractionation of impact melt sheets. Another piece of evidence supporting our model comes from the overlapping of Ti-in-zircon thermometry of Hadean detrital zircons (~4.4. billion years) from Archean metasedimentary rocks with those from granophyre of the SIC. This similarity testifies for the possible generation of more felsic lithologies within differentiated Hadean impact melt sheets caused by the intense asteroid bombardment of an early, hydrosphere-covered proto-crust57. We thus concur with an idea that most felsic rocks during the late Hadean were likely generated through impact-induced melting of the proto-crust26 followed by shallow-level differentiation in impact melt sheets.
Finally, our study contributes to resolution of a current debate regarding the efficiency of internal differentiation in the Moon’s impact melt sheets10,11,12,14. It supports a concept that such giant melt sheets, as 50 km thick and the 2500 km in diameter South Pole-Aitken11, were able to undergo large-scale igneous differentiation and may, therefore, have contributed to the diversification of melt lithologies in the Moon’s early crust. In particular, the formation of shallow noritic layers enriched in FeO and TiO2 in the South Pole-Aitken basin could be attributed to its large-scale differentiation of its voluminous impact melt sheet11,12,58. It may well be, however, that only the thickest impact melt sheets on the Moon, i.e., within the multi-ring basins, had the potential to differentiate. This is because melt differentiation is favoured, among other factors (melt composition, sheet thickness, etc.), by high planetary gravity. The lower gravity environment of the Moon compared to the Earth59 would, therefore, require thicker melt sheets (for a given composition) before they can differentiate, compared to their terrestrial counterparts60. Measurement-based evidence (i.e., rock samples or remote sensing) for large-scale differentiation of lunar impact melt rocks is still quite limited. Direct sampling of impact lithologies showed that some 30–50% of the rocks from highland landing sites sampled during the Apollo missions are impact lithologies: breccias, melt rocks and glasses. The identified melt rocks are, however, generally aphanitic to fine grained and charged with lithic and mineral clasts. Although believed, in some cases, to be linked to the large-scale impacts that formed multi-ring basins on the Moon61,62,63, they likely represent ejected melt material and not direct samples of the voluminous, interior impact melt sheets, such as the SIC. There is, however, one sample in the Apollo collection, a noritic anorthosite in breccia 67955, that is interpreted on geochemical grounds as a differentiated impact melt rock64. It is believed to represent a sample of a coherent and differentiated impact melt sheet from a 4.2 billion years basin-sized impact, which was sampled and transported as ejecta to the Apollo 16 site by the Imbrium impact event. Additional evidence is expected to be obtained from multi-ring basins of the Moon, which are currently considered as a high-priority future target for human or robotic landed missions during which more impact rock samples will be collected for further analysis65.
Methods
Rock sampling, major and trace chemical analyses
Three detailed sections through the melanorite bodies and adjacent rocks of the SIC were sampled. Over 600 samples (each sampled weighted ~1 kg) were collected for petrographic, whole-rock (XRF and ICP MS) and mineral compositional analyses. Major and trace elements were analysed by Genalysis Intertek Laboratory Services in Australia. Major elements were determined through X-ray fluorescence analyses (XRF) of compressed powder pellets. Calibrations used the international rock standard SARM8 as well as in-house controls. Agreement with recommended values was better than 0.6% for Cr2O3, Fe2O3, MgO, Al2O3 and better than for 1–6% for all other major elements. Trace elements were determined through inductively-coupled plasma mass spectrometry and atomic emission spectrometry (ICP-MS/ICP-AES) with four acid digests. Each ICP-MS analysis was accompanied by control standards GTS-2a, AMIS0167, and AMIS0013 and selected samples were re-analyzed to check anomalous results. For all elements, the relative standard deviations were less than 10%. A complete list of analyses from the Elm traverse of the SIC (Figs. 5 and 7) is available online within the electronic Supplementary Data 1.
Isotopic analyses
The methods for Sm-Nd isotope analyses followed standard procedures at the Geological Survey of Finland66. The 120–400 mg of powdered sample was spiked with a 149Sm-150Nd tracer. The sample-spike mixture was dissolved in HF-HNO3 in Savillex screw-cap beakers on hot plate (mafic rocks) or in sealed Teflon bombs in an oven at 180 °C (felsic rocks) for 48 h. After careful evaporation of the fluorides, the residue was dissolved in 6 N HCl and a clear solution was achieved. Sm and Nd were separated in two stages using a conventional cation exchange procedure (7 ml of AG50Wx8 ion exchange resin in a bed of 12 cm length) and a modified version of the Teflon-HDEHP (hydrogen diethylhexyl phosphate) method67. The measurements were made in a dynamic mode on a VG SECTOR 54 mass spectrometer using Ta-Re triple filaments. 143Nd/144Nd ratio is normalized to 146Nd/144Nd = 0.7219. The average value for the La Jolla standard was 143Nd/144Nd = 0.511854 ± 0.000008 (1 standard deviation, n = 27). The Sm/Nd ratio of the spike has been calibrated against the Caltech mixed Sm/Nd standard68. Based on duplicated analyses, the error in 147Sm/144Nd is estimated to be 0.4%. Initial 143Nd/144Nd ratios and εNd values were calculated with the following parameters: λ147Sm = 6.54 × 10–12a–1, 147Sm/144Nd = 0.1966 and 143Nd/144Nd = 0.51264 for present CHUR. Depleted mantle model ages (TDM) were calculated according to DePaolo’s method69. Measurement on the rock standard BCR-1 provided the following values: Sm = 6.58 ppm, Nd = 28.8 ppm, 147Sm/144Nd = 0.1380, 143Nd/144Nd = 0.51264 ± 0.00002. Total procedural blank was <0.5 ng for Nd. A complete list of Sm-Nd analyses from the melanorite bodies of the SIC (Fig. 7) is available online within the electronic Supplementary Data 2.
Data availability
The authors declare that all relevant data are available within the article and its supplementary information files.
References
Osinski, G. R. & Pierazzo, E. Impact Cratering: Processes and Products. 336 pp (John Wiley & Sons, Hoboken, NJ, 2013).
Lightfoot, P. C. Nickel Sulfide Ores and Impact melts: Origin of the Sudbury Igneous Complex, 662 pp (Elsevier, New York, NY, 2016).
Lightfoot, P. C. & Zotov, I. A. Geology and geochemistry of the Sudbury Igneous Complex, Ontario, Canada: origin of nickel sulfide mineralization associated with an impact-generated melt sheet. Geol. Ore Depos. 47, 349–381 (2005).
Therriault, A. M., Fowler, A. D. & Grieve, R. A. F. The Sudbury Igneous Complex: a differentiated impact melt sheet. Econ. Geol. 97, 1521–1540 (2002).
Lavrenchuk, A., Latypov, R. M. & Lightfoot, P. C. The Sudbury Igneous Complex, Canada: numerical modeling confirms fractionation of a single parental magma. Conference Proceeding of the 11th International Platinum Symposium, Sudbury, Canada (2010).
Dessureau, G. Geochemistry of the mafic and felsic norite in Whistle embayment: implications for the crystallization history of the Sudbury Igneous Complex, Sudbury, Ontario. Master thesis, Laurentian University, Canada, 134 pp. (2003).
Grieve, R. A. F., Stöffler, D. & Deutsch, A. The Sudbury structure: controversial or misunderstood? J. Geophys. Res. 96, 22,753–22,764 (1991).
Grieve, R. A. F. An impact model for the Sudbury structure. In Proceedings of the Sudbury-Noril’sk Symposium (eds Lightfoot, P. C. & Naldrett, A. J.) Ontario Geological Survey Special Volume 5, 119–132 (1994).
Mungall, J. E., Ames, D. E. & Hanley, J. J. Geochemical evidence from the Sudbury structure for crustal redistribution by large bolide impacts. Nature 429, 546–548 (2004).
Vaughan, W. M., Head, J. W., Wilson, L. & Hess, P. C. Geology and petrology of enormous volumes of impact melt on the moon: a case study of the Orientale impact melt sea. Icarus 223, 749–765 (2013).
Vaughan, W. M. & Head, J. W. Impact melt differentiation in the South Pole-Aitken basin: some observations and speculations. Planet. Space Sci. 91, 101–106 (2014).
Hurwitz, D. M. & Kring, D. A. Differentiation of the South Pole-Aitken basin impact melt sheet: Implications for lunar exploration. J. Geophys. Res. 119, 1110–1133 (2014).
Cooper, C. D. & Spray, J. G. Geochemistry of the impact-generated melt sheet at Manicouagan: evidence for fractional crystallization. J. Geophys. Res. 116, B06204, https://doi.org/10.1029/2010JB008084 (2011).
Spudis, P. D., Martin, D. J. P. & Kramer, G. Geology and composition of the Orientale Basin impact melt sheet. J. Geophys. Res.: Planets 119, 19–29 (2014).
Ariskin, A. A., Deutsch, A. & Ostermann, M. Sudbury Igneous Complex: simulating phase equilibria and in situ differentiation for two proposed parental magmas. Geol. Soc. Am. Spec. Pap. 339, 373–387 (1999).
Chai, G. & Eckstrand, O. R. Origin of the Sudbury Igneous Complex, Ontario –differentiated of two separate magmas. Geological Survey of Canada Paper 93-1E, 219–230 (1993).
Golightly, J. P. The Sudbury Igneous Complex as an impact melt: evolution and ore genesis. In Proceedings of the Sudbury-Noril’sk Symposium (eds Lightfoot, P. C. & Naldrett, A. J.) Ontario Geological Survey Special Volume 5, 105–117 (1994).
Zieg, M. J. & Marsh, B. D. The Sudbury Igneous Complex: viscous emulsion differentiation of a superheated impact melt sheet. Geol. Soc. Am. Bull. 117, 1427–1450 (2005).
Marsh, B. D. On some fundamentals of igneous petrology. Contrib. Mineral. Petrol. 166, 665–690 (2013).
Krogh, T. E., Davis, D. W. & Corfu, F. Precise U-Pb zircon and baddeleyite ages for the Sudbury area. In The Geology and Ore Deposits of the Sudbury Structure. Ontario Geological Survey Special Volume 1, (eds Pye, E. G., Naldrett, A. J. & Giblin, P. E.) pp. 431–446 (1984).
Ivanov, B. A. & Deutsch, A. Sudbury impact event: cratering mechanics and thermal history, In Large Meteorite Impacts and Planetary Evolution II (eds Dressler, B. O. & Sharpton, V. L.) Geol. Soc. Am. Spec. Pap. 339, 389–398 (1999).
Prevec, S. A. & Cawthorn, R. G. Thermal evolution and interaction between impact melt sheet and footwall: a genetic model for the contact sublayer of the Sudbury Igneous Complex, Canada. J. Geophys. Res. 107(B8), 2176, https://doi.org/10.1029/2001JB000525. (2002).
Kompaniets, K. Stratification within the granophyre of the South Range of the Sudbury Igneous Complex. Master’s thesis, University of Toronto, 31 pp. (2015).
Grieve, R. A. F. Impact bombardment and its role in proto-continental growth on the early Earth. Precambrian Res. 10, 217–247, https://doi.org/10.1016/0301-9268(80)90013-3 (1980).
Grieve, R. A. F., Cintala, M. J. & Therriault, A. M. Large-scale impacts and the evolution of the Earth’s crust: the early years. Geol. Soc. Am. Spec. Pap. 405, 23–31 (2006).
Johnson, T. E. et al. An impact melt origin for Earth’s oldest known evolved rocks. Nat. Geosci., https://doi.org/10.1038/s41561-018-0206-5 (2018).
Gerya, T., Stern, R., Baes, M., Sobolev, S. & Whattam, S. Plate tectonics on the earth triggered by plume-induced subduction initiation. Nature 527, 221–225 (2015).
Rozel, A. B., Golabek, G. J., Jain, C., Tackley, P. J. & Gerya, T. Continental crust formation on early earth controlled by intrusive magmatism. Nature 545, 332–335 (2017).
Johnson, T. E., Brown, M., Gardiner, N. J., Kirkland, C. L. & Smithies, R. H. Earth’s first stable continents did not form by subduction. Nature 543, 239–242 (2017).
O’Neill, C., Marchi, S., Zhang, S. & Bottke, W. Impact-driven subduction on the Hadean Earth. Nat. Geosci. 10, 793–797 (2017).
Bédard, J. H. A catalytic delamination-driven model for coupled genesis of Archaean crust and sub-continental lithospheric mantle. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 70, 1188–1214 (2006).
Bédard, J. H. Stagnant lids and mantle overturns: Implications for Archaean tectonics, magmagenesis, crustal growth, mantle evolution, and the start of plate tectonics. Geosci. Front. 9, 19–49 (2018).
Pattison, E. F. The Sudbury layer. Can. Mineral. 17, 257–274 (1979).
Grant, R. W. & Bite, A. The Sudbury Quartz Diorite Offset Dikes. In The Geology and Ore deposits of the Sudbury Structure (eds Pye, E. G., Naldrett, A. J., & Giblin, P. E.) Special Publication 1. Toronto: Ontario Geological Survey. pp. 275–300. (1984).
Latypov, R. M. Basal reversals in mafic sills and layered intrusions. In Layered Intrusions (eds Charlier, B., Namur, O., Latypov R. & Tegner, C.) Springer pp. 259-293 (1st Edition ed.). Weteringschans: Springer International Publishing. New York City: Springer. 9401796521, 9789401796521 (2015).
Strongman, K. Chemostratigraphy of the South Range Norite, Sudbury Igneous Complex. Unpublished B.Sc. thesis. Laurentian University, Sudbury, Ontario, p. 53 (2016).
Faggart, B. E., Basu, A. R. & Tatsumoto, M. Origin of the Sudbury Complex by meteoritic impact: neodymium isotopic evidence. Science 230, 436–439 (1985).
Dickin, A. P., Nguyen, T. & Crocket, J. H. Isotopic evidence for a single impact melting origin of the Sudbury Igneous Complex. Geol. Soc. Am. Spec. Pap. 339, 361–371 (1999).
Lesher, C. M., et al. Two Melts in the Sudbury Igneous Complex. The 35th International Geological congress. Cape Town, South Africa. https://www.americangeosciences.org/information/igc (2016).
Grieve, R. A. F., Ames, D. E., Morgan, J. V. & Artemieva, N. The evolution of the Onaping Formation at the Sudbury impact structure. Meteorit. Planet. Sci. 45, 759–782 (2010).
Anders, D., Osinski, G. R., Grieve, R. A. F. & Brillinger, D. T. M. The Basal Onaping intrusion in the North Range of the Sudbury impact structure: roof rocks of the Sudbury Igneous Complex. Meteorit. Planet. Sci. 50, 1577–1594 (2015).
Ubide, T. et al. Protracted volcanism after large impacts: evidence from the Sudbury impact basin. J. Geophys. Res. 122, 701–728 (2017).
Shirley, D. N. Differentiation and compaction in the Palisades sill, New Jersey. J. Petrol. 28, 835–865 (1987).
Naslund, H. R. Petrology of the Basistoppen Sill, East Greenland: a calculated magma differentiation trend. Journal of Petrology 30, 299–319 (1989).
Wager, L. R. & Brown, G. M. Layered Igneous Rocks. Edinburgh: Oliver & Boyd, 588 pp. (1968).
Morse, S. A. The Kiglapait layered intrusion, Labrador. Geol. Soc. Am., Mem. 112, 204 (1969).
Darling, J. R., Hawkesworth, C. J., Lightfoot, P. C., Storey, C. D. & Tremblay, E. Isotopic heterogeneity in the Sudbury impact melt sheet. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 289, 347–356 (2010).
Jaupart, C. & Tait, S. Dynamics of differentiation in magma reservoirs. J. Geophys. Res. 100, 615–17,636 (1995).
Abramov, O., Kring, D. A. & Mojzsis, S. J. The impact environment of the Hadean Earth. Chem. Erde 73, 227–248 (2013).
Marchi, S. et al. Widespread mixing and burial of Earth’s Hadean crust by asteroid impacts. Nature 511, 578–582 (2014).
Roman, A. & Jaupart, C. The fate of mafic and ultramafic intrusions in the continental crust. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 453, 131–140 (2016).
Glazner, A. F. Foundering of mafic plutons and density stratification of continental crust. Geology 22, 435–438 (1994).
Reimink, J. R. et al. No evidence for Hadean continental crust within Earth’s oldest evolved rock unit. Nat. Geosci. 9, 777–780, https://doi.org/10.1038/ngeo2786. (2016).
Charlier B., Namur, O., Latypov R. & Tegner, C. (eds). Layered Intrusions, Springer. (1st Edition ed.). (Weteringschans: Springer International Publishing. New York City: Springer. 9401796521, 9789401796521, 748 pp, 2015).
Kamber, B. S. The Enigma of the Terrestrial Protocrust: evidence for its former existence and the importance of its complete disappearance. Dev. Precambrian Geol. 15, 75–89 (2007).
Reimink, J. R., Chacko, T., Stern, R. A. & Heaman, L. M. Earth’s earliest evolved crust generated in an Iceland-like setting. Nat. Geosci. 7, 529–533 (2014).
Kenny, G. G., Whitehouse, M. J. & Kamber, B. S. Differentiated impact melt sheets may be a potential source of Hadean detrital zircon. Geology 44, 435–438 (2016).
Pieters, C. M., Head, J. W., Gaddis, L., Jolliff, B. & Duke, M. Rock types of South Pole-Aitken basin and extent of basaltic volcanism. J. Geophys. Res. 106(E11), 28,001–28,022 (2001).
Cintala, M. J. & Grieve, R. A. F. Scaling impact melting and crater dimensions: Implications for the lunar cratering record. Meteorit. Planet. Sci. 33, 889–912 (1998).
Grieve, R. A. F. & Cintala, M. J. An analysis of differential impact melt-crater scaling and implications for the terrestrial impact record. Meteoritics 27, 526–538 (1992).
Ryder, G. & Spudis, P. Chemical composition and origin of Apollo 15 impact melts. Proc. 17th. Lunar Planet. Sci. Conf., J. Geophys. Res. B4, E432–E446 (1987).
Spudis, P. D. Apollo 16 site geology and impact melts: Implications for the geologic history of the lunar highlands. Proc. 15th. Lunar Planet. Sci. Conf., J. Geophys. Res. 89, C95–C107 (1984).
Simonds, C. H. Thermal regimes in impact melts and the petrology of the Apollo 17 Station 6 boulder, Proc. Lunar Sci. Conf. 6 th, 1, 641–672 (1975).
Norman, M. D., Taylor, L. A., Shih, C.-Y. & Nyquist, L. E. Crystal accumulation in a 4.2 Ga lunar impact melt. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 172, 410–429 (2016).
Hurwitz, D. M. & Kring, D. A. Potential sample sites for South Pole Aitken basin impact melt within the Schrödinger basin. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 427, 31–36 (2015).
Hanski, E., Walker, R. J., Huhma, H. & Suominen, I. The Os and Nd isotopic systematics of c. 2.44 Ga Akanvaara and Koitelainen mafic layered intrusions in northern Finland. Precambrian Res. 109, 73–102 (2001).
Richard, P., Shimizu, N. & Allègre, C. J. 143Nd/146Nd, a natural tracer: an application to oceanic basalts. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 31, 269–278 (1976).
Wasserburg, G. J., Jacobsen, S. B., DePaolo, D. J., McCulloch, M. T. & Wen, T. Precise determination on Sm/Nd ratios, Sm and Nd isotopic abundances in standard solutions. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 45, 2311–2323 (1981).
DePaolo, D. J. Neodymium isotopes in the Colorado Front Range and crust-mantle evolution in the Proterozoic. Nature 291, 684–687 (1981).
Irvine, T. N. Olivine-pyroxene-plagioclase relations in the system Mg2SiO4-CaAl2Si208- KAlSi3O8-SiO2 and their bearing on the differentiation of stratiform intrusions. Carnegie Inst Washington 74, 492–500 (1975).
Acknowledgements
We are grateful to P. Lightfoot, M. Lesher, J. Mungall, W. Peredery, R. Keays, E. Pattison, P. Golightly, M. Andreoli, T. Ubide, E. Hunt, R. James, J. Day, U. Reimold, G. Osinski, J. Bédard, J. Kramers, N. Arndt, C. Hawkesworth and R. Gibson for fruitful discussions over the years on several aspects of this study, as well as for critical comments and useful suggestions on the earlier versions of this manuscript. The research was supported by several research grants to R.L and S.C. from the National Research Foundation of South Africa and DST-NRF CIMERA.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
R.L. and S.C. undertook field work, mapping and geochemical sampling of the SIC as well as conceptualized the original idea and wrote a draft of the paper. R.G. has contributed with knowledge on bolide impacts and in extending the results of this research to the other terrestrial planets. H.H. performed whole-rock isotopic analyses and participated in data processing and interpretation. All co-authors discussed the results and problems and contributed to producing a final draft for peer reviews.
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing interests.
Additional information
Journal peer review information: Nature Communications thanks the anonymous reviewers for their contribution to the peer review of this work. Peer reviewer reports are available.
Publisher’s note: Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Rights and permissions
Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
About this article
Cite this article
Latypov, R., Chistyakova, S., Grieve, R. et al. Evidence for igneous differentiation in Sudbury Igneous Complex and impact-driven evolution of terrestrial planet proto-crusts. Nat Commun 10, 508 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-08467-9
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-08467-9
This article is cited by
-
Magmatic karst reveals dynamics of crystallization and differentiation in basaltic magma chambers
Scientific Reports (2021)
-
Ocean resurge-induced impact melt dynamics on the peak-ring of the Chicxulub impact structure, Mexico
International Journal of Earth Sciences (2021)
-
Evidence of extensive lunar crust formation in impact melt sheets 4,330 Myr ago
Nature Astronomy (2020)
-
Fossilized solidification fronts in the Bushveld Complex argue for liquid-dominated magmatic systems
Nature Communications (2020)
Comments
By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms and Community Guidelines. If you find something abusive or that does not comply with our terms or guidelines please flag it as inappropriate.