Published On: 04.08.23 | 

By: Adam Jones

University of Alabama research: Beneath the Earth, ancient ocean floor likely surrounds the core

Researchers lower seismic equipment into place at one of 15 Antarctic stations in 2012. The buried stations are producing seismic data that is helping researchers better understand the boundary between Earth's mantle and its core. (Lindsey Kenyon)

Through global-scale seismic imaging of the Earth’s interior, research led by the University of Alabama revealed a layer between the core and the mantle that is likely a dense, yet thin, sunken ocean floor, according to results published in Science Advances.

The latest data suggests this layer of ancient ocean floor, seen only in isolated patches previously, may cover the core-mantle boundary (CMB). Subducted underground long ago as the Earth’s plates shifted, this ultra-low velocity zone (ULVZ) is denser than the rest of the deep mantle, slowing seismic waves reverberating beneath the surface.

“Seismic investigations, such as ours, provide the highest-resolution imaging of the interior structure of our planet, and we are finding that this structure is vastly more complicated than once thought,” said Samantha Hansen, the George Lindahl III Endowed Professor in geological sciences at UA and lead author of the study. “Our research provides important connections between shallow and deep Earth structure and the overall processes driving our planet.”

Along with Hansen, co-authors on the paper are Edward Garnero, Mingming Li and Sang-Heon Shim from Arizona State University and Sebastian Rost from the University of Leeds in the United Kingdom.

In this representation of the underground imaging, seismic waves from earthquakes in the southern hemisphere sample the ultra-low velocity zone structure along the Earth’s core-mantle boundary and are recorded by sensors in Antarctica. (Edward Garnero and Mingming Li / Arizona State University)

Roughly 2,000 miles below the surface, Earth’s rocky mantle meets the molten, metallic outer core. The changes in physical properties across this boundary are greater than those between the solid rock on the surface and the air above it.

Understanding the composition of the core-mantle boundary on a large scale is difficult, but a seismic network deployed by Hansen, her students and others during four trips to Antarctica collected data for three years. Similar to a medical scan of the body, the 15 stations in the network buried in Antarctica used seismic waves created by earthquakes from around the globe to create an image of the Earth below.

The project was able to probe in high resolution a large portion of the southern hemisphere for the first time using a detailed method that examines sound wave echoes from the core-mantle boundary. Hansen and the international team identified unexpected energy in the seismic data that arrives within several seconds of the boundary-reflected wave.

These subtle signals were used to map a variable layer of material across the study region that measures in the tens of kilometers — pencil thin, compared to the thickness of the Earth’s dominant layers. The properties of the anomalous core-mantle boundary coating include strong wave-speed reductions, leading to the name of ultra-low velocity zone.

The University of Alabama’s Samantha Hansen digs in Antarctica in late 2012. Polar gear makes the conditions bearable even if it’s minus 80 degrees. (Lindsey Kenyon)

ULVZs can be well explained by former oceanic seafloors that sank to the core-mantle boundary. Oceanic material is carried into the interior of the planet where two tectonic plates meet and one dives beneath the other, known as subduction zones. Accumulations of subducted oceanic material collect along the core-mantle boundary and are pushed by the slowly flowing rock in the mantle over geologic time. The distribution and variability of such material explains the range of observed ULVZ properties.

The ULVZs can be thought of as mountains along the core-mantle boundary, with heights ranging from less than about 3 miles to more than 25 miles.

“Analyzing thousands of seismic recordings from Antarctica, our high-definition imaging method found thin anomalous zones of material at the CMB everywhere we probed,” Garnero said. “The material’s thickness varies from a few kilometers to tens of kilometers. This suggests we are seeing mountains on the core, in some places up to five times taller than Mount Everest.”

These underground “mountains” may play an important role in how heat escapes from the core, the portion of the planet that powers the magnetic field. Material from the ancient ocean floors can also become entrained in mantle plumes, or hot spots, that travel back to the surface through volcanic eruptions.

This story originally appeared on the University of Alabama’s website.