Saturday, March 18, 2023

Scientists Just Discovered a Molten Layer Below Earth's Surface

Story by Tim Newcomb • Yesterday 

Scientists found a molten layer about 100 miles under Earth’s surface. 
Here's what it actually does.
© RyanJLane - Getty Images

Scientists found a molten layer about 100 miles under Earth’s surface.

They believe this is a new layer of Earth’s interior found globally.

The discovery could help determine how tectonic plates move.


Scientists have found Hell on Earth. Well, more accurately: Hell in Earth.

In a new study published in the journal Nature Geoscience, researchers from the University of Texas detected a layer of molten rock hidden under Earth’s tectonic plates, about 100 miles from the surface and exceeding 2,600 degrees Fahrenheit.


In the past, scientists believed molten melt existed in patches, but the new findings reveal the global extent of the molten layer and its relationship to plate tectonics. The layer is part of the asthenosphere, which sits under Earth’s tectonic plates in the upper mantle and gives needed topography, forming a relatively soft boundary that lets plates move through the mantle. Without the softness, Earth’s upper layers would be too rigid for tectonic plate movement.

“When we think about something melting, we intuitively think that the melt must play a big role in the material’s viscosity,” Junlin Hua, research lead from the University of Texas Jackson School of Geoscience, says in a news release. “But what we found is that even where the melt fraction is quite high, its effect on mantle flow is very minor.”

That means the heat and rock in the mantle have the influence on the motion of tectonic plates, giving less prominence to the molten layer. So even though Earth’s interior is largely solid, “over long periods of time, rocks can shift and flow like honey,” Hua says.

The melt layer doesn’t have any influence on plate tectonics. Instead, coauthor Thorsten Becker says the layer is more a byproduct of what is happening on Earth.

“Through this study, not only do we have a much better understanding of the internal dynamics of the planet,” co-author Esteban Gazel, of Cornell University, says in a news release, “but also the physical properties of a boundary layer that really is critical for everything, including life on Earth.”

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