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The Earth did not have the interior structure described in the preceding
section when it was formed. The geological process by which the Earth came to
have its present interior structure is called differentiation, and is
illustrated in the following figure.
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| The process of geological differentiation
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Within about 1 billion years of its formation the Earth was melted by heat
arising from a combination of sources:
Gravitational energy left from the formation of the planet,
Meteor bombardment
Decay of radioactive material trapped in the body of the Earth.
While the Earth was molten, gravity acted to concentrate more dense
material near the center and less dense material nearer the surface. When the
Earth solidified again (except for the liquid outer core) it was left with a
layered structure with more dense material like iron and nickel near the center
and less dense rocks nearer the surface. As the outer layers cooled and
solidified, large cracks developed because of thermal stress, leaving the
lithosphere broken up into large blocks or plates.
As we shall see, this has enormous implications for the subsequent geological
history of the Earth because it produces conditions favorable for plate
tectonics. One of the crucial questions that we will have of all solid
bodies in the Solar System is whether they have ever been differentiated.
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