Rock samples indicate water is key ingredient for crust formation
Rock samples indicate water is key ingredient for crust formation
BY EXAMINING THE COOLING RATE OF ROCKS THAT FORMED MORE THAN 10 MILES BENEATH THE EARTHS SURFACE, SCIENTISTS LED BY THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN JACKSON SCHOOL OF GEOSCIENCES HAVE FOUND THAT WATER PROBABLY PENETRATES DEEP INTO THE CRUST AND UPPER MANTLE AT MID-OCEAN SPREADING ZONES, THE PLACES WHERE NEW CRUST IS MADE.
The finding adds evidence to one side of a long-standing debate on how magma from the Earths mantle cools to form the lower layers of crust.
Nick Dygert, a postdoctoral fellow in the Jackson Schools Department of Geological Sciences, led the research which was published in May in the print edition of Earth and Planetary Science Letters. Collaborators include Peter Kelemen of Colombia University and Yan Liang of Brown University.
The Earths mantle is a semi-solid layer that separates the planets crust from the core. Dygert said that while its well known that magma upwelling from the mantle at mid-ocean spreading zones creates new crust, there are many questions on how the process works.
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http://www.heritagedaily.com/2017/05/rock-samples-indicate-water-is-key-ingredient-for-crust-formation/114700