ADD ANI AS A TRUSTED SOURCE
googleads
ANI Logo
Menu
Science

Alpine rock displays plate movement dynamics in Earth's interior

Geoscientists examined rocks in mountain ranges to determine how they originally travelled lower into the depths and then back up to the surface.

ANI Oct 27, 2023 22:58 IST googleads

Representative image

Washington [US], October 27 (ANI): Geoscientists examined rocks in mountain ranges to determine how they originally travelled lower into the depths and then back up to the surface.
This history of burial and exhumation shed light on plate tectonics and mountain formation. Certain rocks and plates that sink deep into the Earth's interior are converted into other sorts due to the enormous pressure that exists there During this UHP metamorphism (UHP: Ultra High Pressure), silica (SiO2) in the rock, for example, transforms into coesite, also known as the UHP polymorph of SiO2. Although it is still silica chemically, the crystal lattices are more closely packed and thus denser.
When the plates rise from the depths, the UHP rocks rise to the surface and can be found in particular areas of the mountains. Their mineral composition reveals the forces to which they were subjected during their vertical trip through the Earth's interior. Using lithostatic pressure as a unit of measurement, pressure and depth can be correlated: the higher the pressure, the deeper the rocks originally lay.
Until recently, scientists considered that UHP rocks were buried at a depth of 120 kilometres. They then returned to the surface, accompanied by the plates. The ambient pressure declined at a steady rate, i.e. statically, during the process.
However, a new study by Goethe University Frankfurt and the universities of Heidelberg and Rennes (France) calls this assumption of a long, continuous ascent into question. Among those involved in the study on the part of Goethe University Frankfurt were first author Cindy Luisier, who came to the university on a Humboldt Research Fellowship, and Thibault Duretz, head of the Geodynamic Modeling Working Group at the Department of Geosciences.
The research team analyzed whiteschists from the Dora Maira Massif in the Western Alps, Italy. "Whiteschists are rocks that formed as a result of the UHP metamorphosis of a hydrothermally altered granite during the formation of the Alps," explained Duretz. "What is special about them is the large amount of coesite. The coesite crystals in the whiteschist are several hundred micrometres in size, which makes them ideal for our experiments."
The piece of whiteschist from the Dora Maira Massif contained pink garnets in a silvery-white matrix composed of quartz and other minerals. "The rock has special chemical and thus mineralogical properties," said Duretz. Together with the team, he analyzed it by first cutting a very thin slice about 50 micrometres thick and then glueing it onto the glass. In this way, it was possible to identify the minerals under a microscope. The next step was computer modelling of specific, particularly interesting areas.
These areas were silica particles surrounded by the grains of pink garnet, in which two SiO2 polymorphs had formed. One of these was coesite, which had formed under very high pressure (4.3 gigapascals). The other silica polymorph was quartz, which lay like a ring around the coesite. It had formed under much lower pressure (1.1 gigapascals).
The whiteschist had evidently first been exposed to very high and then much lower pressure. There had been a sharp decrease in pressure or decompression. The most important discovery was that spoke-shaped cracks radiated from the SiO2 inclusions in all directions: the result of the phase transition from coesite to quartz. The effect of this transition was a large change in volume, and it caused extensive geological stresses in the rock. These made the garnet surrounding the SiO2 inclusions fracture.
"Such radial cracks can only form if the host mineral, the garnet, stays very strong," explained Duretz. "At such temperatures, garnet only stays very strong if the pressure drops very quickly."
On a geological timescale, "very quickly" means in thousands to hundreds of thousands of years. In this "short" period, the pressure must have dropped from 4.3 to 1.1 gigapascals. The garnet would otherwise have creeped viscously to compensate for the change in volume in the SiO2 inclusions, instead of forming cracks.
According to Duretz, the previous assumption that UHP rock reaches a depth of 120 kilometres seems less probable in view of this rapid decompression because the ascent from such a depth would take place over a long period of time, which does not equate with the high decompression rate, he said.
"We rather presume that our whiteschist lay at a depth of only 60 to 80 kilometres," says the geoscientist. And the processes underway in Earth's interior could also be quite different than assumed in the past. That rock units move continuously upwards over great distances, from a depth of 120 kilometres to the surface, also seems less probable than previously thought.
"Our hypothesis is that rapid tectonic processes took place instead, which led to minimal vertical plate displacements." We can imagine it like this, he said: The plates suddenly jerked upwards a little bit in Earth's interior - and as a result, the pressure surrounding the UHP rock decreased in a relatively short time. (ANI)

Get the App

What to Read Next

Science

Amphibians bounce-back from Earth’s greatest mass extinction

Amphibians bounce-back from Earth’s greatest mass extinction

Researchers at the University of Bristol discovered that ancient frog ancestors survived the biggest mass extinction of species by eating on freshwater prey that evaded terrestrial predators.

Read More
Science

Blood tests predict Parkinson’s seven years before symptoms

Blood tests predict Parkinson’s seven years before symptoms

A group of scientists from University College London (UCL) and University Medical Centre Goettingen have created a straightforward blood test that employs artificial intelligence (AI) to forecast Parkinson's disease up to seven years before symptoms appear.

Read More
Science

People with essential tremor may have increased risk of dementia

People with essential tremor may have increased risk of dementia

According to research, people with essential tremor, a movement disease characterized by involuntary shaking, may be three times more likely to develop dementia than the general population.

Read More
Science

Ice age may help predict oceans’ response to global warming

Ice age may help predict oceans’ response to global warming

A team of scientists led by a Tulane University oceanographer discovered that deposits deep beneath the ocean floor provide a means to estimate ocean oxygen levels and their relationship to carbon dioxide in the Earth's atmosphere during the last ice age, which ended more than 11,000 years ago.

Read More
Science

Wearable devices may help astronauts avoid being 'lost' in space

Wearable devices may help astronauts avoid being 'lost' in space

The sky is no longer the limit - but flying is risky. We lose many of the clues we need to orient ourselves when we leave the Earth's surface, and this spatial disorientation can be fatal. Astronauts typically require extensive training to protect themselves against it. However, scientists have discovered that wearable devices that vibrate to provide orientation cues may considerably improve the efficacy of this training, making spaceflight slightly safer.

Read More
Science

New study explains precious metals in the Earth's mantle

New study explains precious metals in the Earth's mantle

Scientists discovered that impact-driven mixing of mantle materials scenarios could prevent metals from totally sinking into the Earth's core based on simulations or models.

Read More
Science

Study reveals how bacteria can organize themselves

Study reveals how bacteria can organize themselves

In a recent study, scientists from MPI-DS's Department of Living Matter Physics built a model that describes ways to interact in bacterial communities. Bacteria exhibit a general organisational structure by sensing chemical concentrations in their environment and adapting their movement.

Read More
Science

Study identifies most urgent issues for grizzly bear conservation

Study identifies most urgent issues for grizzly bear conservation

The health of grizzly bear populations is negatively impacted by humans through top-down factors like direct mortality linked to forestry roads (from conflict or illegal killings) and movement from high-quality habitats, as well as bottom-up factors like decreased food resource availability.

Read More
Science

Electrons from Earth may be producing water on Moon: Study

Electrons from Earth may be producing water on Moon: Study

Scientists determined that high energy electrons in Earth's plasma sheet are contributing to weathering processes on the Moon's surface and may have contributed to the development of water on the lunar surface.

Read More
Science

Earth's electrons may be forming water on Moon: Study

Earth's electrons may be forming water on Moon: Study

A team of researchers discovered that high energy electrons in Earth's plasma sheet are contributing to weathering processes on the Moon's surface and that the electrons may have aided in the formation of water on the lunar surface.

Read More
Home About Us Our Products Advertise Contact Us Terms & Condition Privacy Policy

Copyright © aninews.in | All Rights Reserved.