Relative Contributions of Uranium, Thorium, and Potassium to Heat Production in the Earth

Abstract
Data from a wide variety of igneous rock types show that the ratio of potassium to uranium is approximately 1 X 104. This suggests that the value of K/U ≈1 X 104 is characteristic of terrestrial materials and is distinct from the value of 8 X 104 found in chondrites. In a model earth with K/U ≈ 104, uranium and thorium are the dominant sources of radioactive heat at the present time. This will permit the average terrestrial concentrations of uranium and thorium to be 2 to 4.7 times higher than that observed in chondrites. The resulting models of the terrestrial heat production will be considerably different from those for chondritic heat production because of the longer half-life of U238 and Th238 compared with K40