Scientists map deep mantle deformation linked to ancient tectonic slabs

Researchers have created the first global map showing how Earth's deepest mantle is deformed, primarily in regions where ancient subducted tectonic slabs reside. Using over 16 million seismograms, the team confirmed patterns predicted by geodynamic models. The findings, published in The Seismic Record, offer new insights into mantle flow near the core-mantle boundary.

Jonathan Wolf of the University of California, Berkeley, and colleagues analyzed seismic waves from earthquakes to map deformation in the lowermost mantle, about 2,900 kilometers beneath the surface. They covered nearly 75% of this layer, detecting seismic anisotropy—variations in wave speeds by direction—in roughly two-thirds of the studied areas. Most deformation aligns with locations of deeply buried slabs from past subduction, as expected from simulations but now shown globally using seismic data. Wolf noted, “We don't have any of this kind of large-scale understanding for flow in the lowermost mantle. And that's really what we want to get at.” The study drew from more than 16 million seismograms across 24 worldwide data centers, including waves that travel through the core and back. This massive dataset revealed how slabs may retain 'fossil' anisotropy or develop new patterns from intense interactions at extreme depths. Wolf described the data as a “treasure trove” for future research, cautioning that absent signals do not mean no deformation. He hopes for expanded analysis to map global flow directions in the deep mantle.

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Researchers at Stanford University have developed the first worldwide map of rare earthquakes occurring deep in Earth's mantle, rather than the crust. These elusive events cluster in regions like the Himalayas and near the Bering Strait. The study, published on February 5 in Science, identifies hundreds of such quakes and introduces a new method to detect them using seismic waves.

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Harvard geoscientists have found the oldest direct evidence of plate tectonics on Earth, dating back 3.5 billion years. Analysis of ancient rocks from western Australia reveals early crustal drift and rotation. The discovery, published in Science, challenges notions of a rigid early planetary surface.

Researchers at Yale University have proposed a new model explaining the dramatic fluctuations in Earth's magnetic field during the Ediacaran Period, from 630 to 540 million years ago. Their analysis of rocks from Morocco suggests these changes followed a structured global pattern rather than random chaos. The findings, published in Science Advances, could improve reconstructions of ancient continents.

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