Seismologists Perform Earth's CT Scan to Explain How Hawaii and Iceland Were Born
Previous attempts to image mantle plumes have detected pockets of hot rock rising in areas where plumes have been proposed, but it was unclear whether they were connected to volcanic hotspots at the surface or the roots of the plumes at the core mantle boundary 2,900 kilometers below the earth's surface.
Seismologists from University of California-Berkeley have produced for the first time a sharp, 3-dimensional scan of Earth's interior that reveals how volcanic island chains like Hawaii, Samoa and Iceland were born.
The study said, "The results conclusively connect plumes of hot rock rising through the Earth's mantle with surface hotspots that generate volcanic island chains." While medical computed tomography, or CT scans employ X-rays to probe the body, the researchers mapped mantle plumes by analyzing the paths of seismic waves bouncing around Earth's interior after 273 strong earthquakes that shook the globe over the past 20 years.
The new, high-resolution map of the mantle, the hot rock below Earth's crust but above the planet's iron core, not only shows these connections for many hotspots on the planet, but reveals that below about 1,000 kilometers the plumes are between 600 and 1,000 kilometers across, up to five times wider than geophysicists previously thought.
First author Scott French, a computational scientist at US Department of Energy's National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC), said, "No one has seen before these stark columnar objects that are contiguous all the way from the bottom of the mantle to the upper part of the mantle."
The findings were detailed in Nature.
Source: IANS