Subduction and atmospheric escape of Earth's seawater constrained by hydrogen isotopes
Hiroyuki Kurokawa, Julien Foriel, Matthieu Laneuville, Christine, Houser, Tomohiro Usui

TL;DR
This study models Earth's water cycle and hydrogen isotope ratios to understand water exchange processes, suggesting early Earth conditions and plate tectonics significantly influenced current oceanic and mantle water reservoirs.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive model incorporating multiple Earth processes to explain the evolution of hydrogen isotopic ratios and water distribution over Earth's history.
Findings
Hydrogen escape, secular regassing, or faster early plate tectonics are needed to match present-day D/H ratios.
The volume of Earth's mantle water could be entirely from regassing, implying larger initial oceans.
D/H ratios over Earth's history can help distinguish between different water cycle evolution scenarios.
Abstract
The hydrogen isotopic (D/H) ratio reflects the global cycling and evolution of water on Earth as it fractionates through planetary processes. We model the water cycle taking seafloor hydrothermal alteration, chemical alteration of continental crust, slab subduction, hydrogen escape from the early Earth, and degassing at mid-ocean ridges, hot spots, and arcs into account. The differences in D/H ratios between present-day oceans, oceanic and continental crust, and mantle are thought to reflect isotopic fractionation through seafloor alteration, chemical alteration, and slab dehydration. However, if the speed of plate tectonics has been nearly constant through out Earth's history, the degassing and regassing rates are too small to reach the present-day D/H ratios. We show that (a) hydrogen escape from reduced early atmosphere, (b) secular net regassing, or (c) faster plate tectonics on…
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