Through the analysis of isotopic compositions of neodymium,
DePaolo and
Wasserburg (1976) discovered that terrestrial igneous rocks at the time of their formation from melts closely followed the "
chondritic uniform reservoir" or "chondritic unifractionated reservoir" (CHUR) line – the way the 143Nd:144Nd ratio increased with time in
chondrites. Chondritic meteorites are thought to represent the earliest (unsorted) material that formed in the
Solar System before planets formed. They have relatively homogeneous trace-element signatures, and therefore their isotopic evolution can model the evolution of the whole Solar System and of the "bulk Earth". After plotting the ages and initial 143Nd/144Nd ratios of terrestrial igneous rocks on a Nd evolution vs. time diagram, DePaolo and Wasserburg determined that Archean rocks had initial Nd isotope ratios very similar to that defined by the CHUR evolution line.
Epsilon notation Since 143Nd/144Nd departures from the CHUR evolution line are very small, DePaolo and Wasserburg argued that it would be useful to create a form of notation that described 143Nd/144Nd in terms of their deviations from the CHUR evolution line. This is called the epsilon notation, whereby one epsilon unit represents a one part per 10,000 deviation from the CHUR composition. Algebraically, epsilon units can be defined by the equation : \varepsilon_{\text{Nd}(t)} = \left[\frac{\left(\frac{^{143}\text{Nd}}{^{144}\text{Nd}}\right)_{\text{sample}(t)}}{\left(\frac{^{143}\text{Nd}}{^{144}\text{Nd}}\right)_{\text{CHUR}(t)}} - 1\right] \times 10\,000. Since epsilon units are finer and therefore a more tangible representation of the initial Nd isotope ratio, by using these instead of the initial isotopic ratios, it is easier to comprehend and therefore compare initial ratios of crust with different ages. In addition, epsilon units will normalize the initial ratios to CHUR, thus eliminating any effects caused by various analytical mass fractionation correction methods applied. In order for a
TCHUR age to be calculated, fractionation between Nd/Sm would have to have occurred during magma extraction from the mantle to produce a continental rock. This fractionation would then cause a deviation between the crustal and mantle isotopic evolution lines. The intersection between these two evolution lines then indicates the crustal formation age. The
TCHUR age is defined by the following equation: : T_\text{CHUR} = \left(\frac{1}{\lambda}\right) \ln \left[1 + \frac{\left(\frac{^{143}\text{Nd}}{^{144}\text{Nd}}\right)_\text{sample} - \left(\frac{^{143}\text{Nd}}{^{144}\text{Nd}}\right)_\text{CHUR}}{\left(\frac{^{147}\text{Sm}}{^{144}\text{Nd}}\right)_\text{sample} - \left(\frac{^{147}\text{Sm}}{^{144}\text{Nd}}\right)_\text{CHUR}}\right]. The
TCHUR age of a rock can yield a formation age for the crust as a whole if the sample has not suffered disturbance after its formation. Since Sm/Nd are rare-earth elements (REE), their characteristically immobile ratios resist partitioning during metamorphism and melting of silicate rocks. This therefore allows crustal formation ages to be calculated, despite any metamorphism the sample has undergone. ==The depleted-mantle model==