Scientists uncover evidence to show earth has cooled
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Science Scientists uncover evidence to show
earth has cooled
Sydney, Oct 24 IANS Scientists have uncovered evidence that the earth's core has cooled considerably over the last three billion years, sparking
questions about whether plate tectonic movement is only a relatively recent phenomenon. The
international research team used synchrotron technology to study the
chemical composition of komatiites - ancient volcanic rocks thrown up from the planet's mantle. Synchrotrons are giant
rings around which electrons are fired to
produce intense x-rays. Komatiites have long intrigued geologists because these magmas must have been created by unusually high
degrees of melting of the mantle. The examples studied by the team are 2.7 billion years old, and were found in present-day
Zimbabwe. Similar magmas are not produced on the planet today. "Because the rocks are so old, they have been subject to
alteration from erosion, weathering and metamorphism," explained Hugh O'Neill from the
Research School of
Earth Sciences at Australian
National University ANU, said in its
press release. "But there are tiny drops of ancient magma trapped inside crystals in the komatiites that are protected from
alteration, and by studying these we've been able to get a sense of what was going on inside the planet in its infancy." For years, scientists have argued about whether or not komatiites formed at a time when the planet's mantle was up to 500
degrees hotter than at present, or if the mantle was only marginally hotter than it is currently, and the unusual composition of komatiites was due to the presence of
water.
Water lowers the temperature at which rocks melt by many hundreds of
degrees. O'Neill and his colleagues from
Imperial College in
London,
University of Tasmania and
University of
Chicago found that there was no evidence of oxidation inside the melt inclusions, which means that the small amount of
water trapped in the inclusions was likely
all that ever existed at the time of the rocks' formation. The lack of
water means that the mantle must have been much hotter billions of years ago than it is today, leading the researchers to conclude that the planet has cooled markedly. The findings were published in
Nature. --Indo-Asian
News Service st/pb/dg 387
Words 24101329
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