Where did all the H2O go? Meteorites resembling the raw material from which Earth formed contain 2 percent water, yet today's oceans make up only about 0.02 percent of our planet's mass. Kei Hirose at the Tokyo Institute of Technology thinks some of it is locked away deep beneath our feet. He and his colleagues simulated conditions in the lower mantle, 400 to 1,800 miles below the surface, by heating minerals to 2,900 degrees Fahrenheit and squeezing them to 250,000 atmospheres in a diamond anvil. Spectro-scopic analysis revealed that the baked rocks held on to a surprising amount of hydrogen, suggesting that mantle rocks may contain a vast amount of water—five times as much as in the oceans. The water in those rocks may help keep them pliable, facilitating Earth's internal churning—the process that ultimately causes earthquakes and continental drift. When sections of crust sink under the oceans, they probably ...
The Waters That Lie Within
Discover how water in the lower mantle influences Earth's geology and may hold secrets to our oceans' future.
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