Diamonds show depth of Earth’s carbon cycle

17 Sep 2011

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Scientists have speculated for some time that the Earth's carbon cycle extends deep into the planet's interior, but until now there has been no direct evidence.

The mantle - Earth's thickest layer - is largely inaccessible. A team of researchers analysed diamonds that originated from the lower mantle at depths of 435 miles (700 kilometres) or more, and erupted to the surface in volcanic rocks called kimberlites.

The diamonds contain what are impurities to the gemologist, but are known as mineral inclusions to the geologist. Analysis shows compositions consistent with the mineralogy of oceanic crust. This finding is the first direct evidence that slabs of oceanic crust sank or subducted into the lower mantle and that material, including carbon, is cycled between Earth's surface and depths of hundreds of miles. The research is published in the 15 September 2011, online Science Express.
 
The mantle extends from as little as 5 to 1,800 miles (10-2,900 kilometres) beneath the Earth's surface. Most diamonds are free from inclusions and come from depths less than 120 miles (200 km).

But in a few localities researchers have found super-deep diamonds from the depths of the convecting upper and lower mantle, as well as the transition zone in between. Whereas inclusions in diamonds from the depths of the upper mantle and transition zone have been consistent with a surface-rock origin, none from the lower mantle have borne this signature until now.
 
The team, which included Carnegie scientists, was led by former Carnegie post-doctoral fellow Michael Walter, now a professor at the University of Bristol, UK. The scientists analysed minute (one to two hundredths of a millimetre) mineral grains from six diamonds from the Juina region in Brazil.

The analysis showed that diamond inclusions initially crystallised as a single mineral that could form only at depths greater than 435 miles (700 km).

But the inclusions recrystallised into multiple minerals as they were carried up to the surface - first probably from a mantle upwelling known as a plume, then as they erupted to the surface in kimberlites
 
The diamonds were analysed for carbon at Carnegie. Four of the diamonds contained low amounts of carbon-13, a signature not found in the lower mantle and consistent with an ocean-crust origin at Earth's surface.

''The carbon identified in other super-deep, lower mantle diamonds is chiefly mantle-like in composition,'' remarked co-author Steven Shirey at Carnegie. ''We looked at the variations in the isotopes of the carbon atoms in the diamonds. Carbon originating in a rock called basalt, which forms from lava at the surface, is often different from that which originates in the mantle, in containing relatively less carbon-13. These super-deep diamonds contained much less carbon-13, which is most consistent with an origin in the organic component found in altered oceanic crust.''
 
''I find it astonishing that we can use the tiniest of mineral grains to show some of the motions of the Earth's mantle at the largest scales,'' concluded Shirey.

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