Readers who know of Centauri Dreams‘ fascination with ‘deep time’ will not be surprised that I am working on a side project involving past, not future time. Specifically, a study of the Eocene, that remarkable period beginning some 55 million years ago during which the ancestors of most modern mammals — including the higher primates, such as apes, monkeys and man – appeared.

And if the Eocene, 2/3 of the way back to the age of the dinosaurs, seems like a long reach from interstellar travel, ponder this: the more we learn about how life adapts to changing planetary environments, the better we’ll be able to carry out the hunt for life around other stars. On that score, it’s interesting to see that a team supported in part by NASA’s Exobiology program has determined that Earth’s continents were in place soon after the planet formed. The Earth was not, in other words, a purely ocean world in that era, or a barren, inhospitable place like the Moon.

Analyzing the occurrence of a rare metal element called hafnium in ancient minerals from the Jack Hills in Western Australia, the team, led by Stephen Mojzsis (University of Colorado), found evidence that the rocks it studied dated back 4.4 billion years. “The view we are taking now is that Earth’s crust, oceans and atmosphere were in place very early on,” said Mojzsis, “and that a habitable planet was established rapidly.”

A 2001 study led by Mojzsis and published in Nature had shown the presence of water on Earth 4.3 billion years ago. For more on the scientist’s earlier work, see this NASA story. The current paper is Harrison, Blichert-Toft, Mojzsis et al., “Heterogeneous Hadean Hafnium: Evidence of Continental Crust at 4.4 to 4.5 Ga,” published online November 17, 2005 and available as a preprint via Science‘s ScienceXpress service. A University of Colorado press release is here.