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Scientists at Cardiff University recover rocks from Earth’s mantel

08 Aug 2024 5 minute read
Professor Johan Lissenberg from Cardiff University’s School of Earth and Environmental Sciences  and colleagues analysing the cores – Image Lesley Anderson

Scientists at Cardiff University have worked alongside an international team of researchers to recover the first long section of rocks that originated in the Earth’s mantle.

The rocks from the layer below the crust and the planet’s largest component, will help unravel the mantle’s role in the origins of life on Earth.

It will be able to identify the volcanic activity generated when it melts, and how it drives the global cycles of important elements such as carbon and hydrogen.

The nearly continuous 1,268 metres of mantle rock was recovered from a “tectonic window” – a section of the seabed where rocks from the mantle were exposed along the Mid-Atlantic Ridge.

The ocean drilling vessel – JOIDES – Image: Thomas Ronge

Record breaking

It was recovered in the spring last year during Expedition 399 ‘Building Blocks of Life, Atlantis Massif’ of the ocean drilling vessel JOIDES Resolution.

With attempts dating back to the early 1960s, the recovery was a record-breaking achievement led by the International Ocean Discovery Program, an international marine research consortium of more than 20 countries that retrieves cores—cylindrical samples of sediment and rock—from the ocean floor to study Earth’s history.

Since then, the expedition team has been compiling an inventory of the recovered mantle rocks to understand their composition, structure and context.

Their findings, presented in the journal Science, reveal a more extensive history of melting in the recovered rocks than expected.

Mantle sample microscope (credited to Johan Lissenberg)

Major achievement 

Lead author Professor Johan Lissenberg from Cardiff University’s School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, said: “When we recovered the rocks last year, it was a major achievement in the history of the Earth sciences, but, more than that, its value is in what the cores of mantle rocks could tell us about the makeup and evolution of our planet.

“Our study begins to look at the composition of the mantle by documenting the mineralogy of the recovered rocks, as well as their chemical makeup.

“Our results differ from what we expected. There is a lot less of the mineral pyroxene in the rocks, and the rocks have got very high concentrations of magnesium, both of which results from much higher amounts of melting than what we would have predicted.”

This melting occurred as the mantle rose from the deeper parts of the Earth towards the surface.

Results from further analysis of this process could have major implications for the understanding of how magma is formed and leads to volcanism, the researchers claim.

Magma

Professor Lissenberg added: “We also found channels through which melt was transported through the mantle, and so we are able to track the fate of magma after it is formed and travels upwards to the Earth’s surface.

“This is important because it tells us how the mantle melts and feeds volcanoes, particularly those on the ocean floor that account for the majority of volcanism on Earth. Having access to these mantle rocks will allow us to make the connection between the volcanoes and the ultimate source of their magmas.”

The study also provides initial results on how olivine, an abundant mineral in mantle rocks, reacts with seawater, leading to a series of chemical reactions that produce hydrogen and other molecules that can fuel life.

Scientists believe this might have been one of the underpinning processes in the origins of life on Earth.

Dr Susan Q Lang, an associate scientist in Geology and Geophysics at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, who was a co-chief scientist on the expedition and part of a team continuing to analyse rock and fluid samples, said: “The rocks that were present on early Earth bear a closer resemblance to those we retrieved during this expedition than the more common rocks that make up our continents today.

“Analysing them gives us a critical view into the chemical and physical environments that would have been present early in Earth’s history, and that could have provided a consistent source of fuel and favourable conditions over geologically long timeframes to have hosted the earliest forms of life.”

The international team of more than 30 scientists from the JOIDES Resolution expedition will continue their research on the recovered drill cores to address a wide range of problems.

Dr Andrew McCaig, an Associate Professor in the School of Earth and Environment at the University of Leeds, who was the lead proponent of Expedition 399 and a co-chief scientist on the Expedition added: “Everyone involved in Expedition 399, starting with the first proposal in 2018, can be proud of the achievements documented in this paper.

“Our new deep hole will be a type section for decades to come in disciplines as diverse as melting processes in the mantle, chemical exchange between rocks and the ocean, organic geochemistry and microbiology.

“All data from the expedition will be fully available, an exemplar of how international science should be conducted.”


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