Sound waves reveal huge cache of diamonds inside the Earth

Sound waves reveal diamond cache deep in Earth’s interior

Study finds 1–2 percent of Earth’s oldest mantle rocks are made from diamond.

From MIT:

There may be more than a quadrillion tons of diamond hidden in the Earth’s interior, according to a new study from MIT and other universities. But the new results are unlikely to set off a diamond rush. The scientists estimate the precious minerals are buried more than 100 miles below the surface, far deeper than any drilling expedition has ever reached.

The ultradeep cache may be scattered within cratonic roots — the oldest and most immovable sections of rock that lie beneath the center of most continental tectonic plates. Shaped like inverted mountains, cratons can stretch as deep as 200 miles through the Earth’s crust and into its mantle; geologists refer to their deepest sections as “roots.”

In the new study, scientists estimate that cratonic roots may contain 1 to 2 percent diamond. Considering the total volume of cratonic roots in the Earth, the team figures that about a quadrillion (1016) tons of diamond are scattered within these ancient rocks, 90 to 150 miles below the surface.

“This shows that diamond is not perhaps this exotic mineral, but on the [geological] scale of things, it’s relatively common,” says Ulrich Faul, a research scientist in MIT’s Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences. “We can’t get at them, but still, there is much more diamond there than we have ever thought before.”

Faul’s co-authors include scientists from the University of California at Santa Barbara, the Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris, the University of California at Berkeley, Ecole Polytechnique, the Carnegie Institution of Washington, Harvard University, the University of Science and Technology of China, the University of Bayreuth, the University of Melbourne, and University College London.

A sound glitch

Faul and his colleagues came to their conclusion after puzzling over an anomaly in seismic data. For the past few decades, agencies such as the United States Geological Survey have kept global records of seismic activity — essentially, sound waves traveling through the Earth that are triggered by earthquakes, tsunamis, explosions, and other ground-shaking sources. Seismic receivers around the world pick up sound waves from such sources, at various speeds and intensities, which seismologists can use to determine where, for example, an earthquake originated.

Scientists can also use this seismic data to construct an image of what the Earth’s interior might look like. Sound waves move at various speeds through the Earth, depending on the temperature, density, and composition of the rocks through which they travel. Scientists have used this relationship between seismic velocity and rock composition to estimate the types of rocks that make up the Earth’s crust and parts of the upper mantle, also known as the lithosphere.

However, in using seismic data to map the Earth’s interior, scientists have been unable to explain a curious anomaly: Sound waves tend to speed up significantly when passing through the roots of ancient cratons. Cratons are known to be colder and less dense than the surrounding mantle, which would in turn yield slightly faster sound waves, but not quite as fast as what has been measured.

“The velocities that are measured are faster than what we think we can reproduce with reasonable assumptions about what is there,” Faul says. “Then we have to say, ‘There is a problem.’ That’s how this project started.”

Diamonds in the deep

The team aimed to identify the composition of cratonic roots that might explain the spikes in seismic speeds. To do this, seismologists on the team first used seismic data from the USGS and other sources to generate a three-dimensional model of the velocities of seismic waves traveling through the Earth’s major cratons.

Next, Faul and others, who in the past have measured sound speeds through many different types of minerals in the laboratory, used this knowledge to assemble virtual rocks, made from various combinations of minerals. Then the team calculated how fast sound waves would travel through each virtual rock, and found only one type of rock that produced the same velocities as what the seismologists measured: one that contains 1 to 2 percent diamond, in addition to peridotite (the predominant rock type of the Earth’s upper mantle) and minor amounts of eclogite (representing subducted oceanic crust). This scenario represents at least 1,000 times more diamond than people had previously expected.

“Diamond in many ways is special,” Faul says. “One of its special properties is, the sound velocity in diamond is more than twice as fast as in the dominant mineral in upper mantle rocks, olivine.”

The researchers found that a rock composition of 1 to 2 percent diamond would be just enough to produce the higher sound velocities that the seismologists measured. This small fraction of diamond would also not change the overall density of a craton, which is naturally less dense than the surrounding mantle.

“They are like pieces of wood, floating on water,” Faul says. “Cratons are a tiny bit less dense than their surroundings, so they don’t get subducted back into the Earth but stay floating on the surface. This is how they preserve the oldest rocks. So we found that you just need 1 to 2 percent diamond for cratons to be stable and not sink.”

In a way, Faul says cratonic roots made partly of diamond makes sense. Diamonds are forged in the high-pressure, high-temperature environment of the deep Earth and only make it close to the surface through volcanic eruptions that occur every few tens of millions of years. These eruptions carve out geologic “pipes” made of a type of rock called kimberlite (named after the town of Kimberley, South Africa, where the first diamonds in this type of rock were found). Diamond, along with magma from deep in the Earth, can spew out through kimberlite pipes, onto the surface of the Earth.

For the most part, kimberlite pipes have been found at the edges of cratonic roots, such as in certain parts of Canada, Siberia, Australia, and South Africa. It would make sense, then, that cratonic roots should contain some diamond in their makeup.

“It’s circumstantial evidence, but we’ve pieced it all together,” Faul says. “We went through all the different possibilities, from every angle, and this is the only one that’s left as a reasonable explanation.”

This research was supported, in part, by the National Science Foundation.

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Chrisinoz
July 17, 2018 5:34 am

Real science

July 17, 2018 5:46 am

It is very similar to the process of reasoning that gives us global warming. It is modeled and makes predictions that cannot be tested in lifetimes of those making the predictions. This is theory, not an objective finding. It might be true and might not but the evidence is all circumstantial as they admit and there may be many other explanations that they have failed to consider. Fortunately this theory doesn’t lead to an expectation that civilization regress to the hunter gatherer stage.

Reply to  Andy Pattullo
July 17, 2018 7:06 pm

They haven’t designed a reproducible experiment yet? That’s something someone should ‘dig’ into. I suggest all the ‘warmists’ that will, hopefully, find an end to their supply of grant money. That should keep them both busy and warm.

Reply to  Andy Pattullo
July 17, 2018 10:18 pm

Precisely – we tried all the things we could think of in our climate models, but only got correlation with our data when we included CO2 forcing and amplification. Therefore, it must be CO2.

Johann Wundersamer
July 17, 2018 6:52 am

“The ultradeep cache may be scattered within cratonic roots — the oldest and most immovable sections of rock that lie beneath the center of most continental tectonic plates. ”

https://www.google.at/search?q=specific+weight+diamonds&oq=specific+weight+diamonds&aqs=chrome.

Johann Wundersamer
July 17, 2018 7:00 am

“Cratons are known to be colder and less dense than the surrounding mantle, which would in turn yield slightly faster sound waves.”

Guess that should say

less dens yield slightly slower sound waves.

Randle Dewees
Reply to  Johann Wundersamer
July 17, 2018 7:27 am

Any geophysicist care to comment? I don’t think density is the only parameter, but i’m not a geophysicist.

Reply to  Randle Dewees
July 17, 2018 3:59 pm

Lower densities are usually accompanied by slower seismic velocities.

Randle Dewees
Reply to  David Middleton
July 18, 2018 5:22 pm

But it’s the specific modulus, right? The colder less dense rock may have a combination of enough shear modulus and low density to have higher seismic wave velocity. Denser rocks usually have higher shear modulus but maybe not in hot or semi melted states. Diamonds are low density but the modulus is sky high. That’s like, makes for really really high speed of sound. The seismic waves are going to really speed up in the diamond zone.
Gad, come on people, don’t make me work. David you are a reference animal, just do it! Speed of sound is proportional to the specific modulus. Proportional to the shear modulus and inversely proportional to density. There is an equation somewhere, in my seismology notes from 1982 buried out in the shed.

Randle Dewees
Reply to  David Middleton
July 18, 2018 6:45 pm

Ugh, went off to Wikipedia. Yeah yeah, basically vel ~ modulus/density. The S and P waves use different modulus qualities, therefore propagate at different speeds. Speed of sound in diamond is about 12000 m/s or 2X common craton rock.

tty
Reply to  Johann Wundersamer
July 17, 2018 1:46 pm

Here is a pretty good explanation about cratonic roots and how they originate:

https://academic.oup.com/astrogeo/article/46/2/2.33/216897

Tom S.
July 17, 2018 7:16 am

Regrettably, this article is feeding into the mystique of natural diamonds, to the benefit of a cartel. “Wow: Diamonds diamonds everywhere but not a hole so deep!”. Diamonds, nearly flawless of any color and size you wish, should be no more $200/carat, but the cartel pressures and does worse to anyone who would create this fair price market. When the deep state enablers of the corrupt diamond industry are stripped of their power, I’ll be looking forward to decorating my wife with tiaras, chokers, and all sorts of diamond jewelry in every color for all clothes and occasions.

Bill
July 17, 2018 9:07 am

DeBeres isn’t going to be happy about this. If someone can reach this cache of diamonds, cost of diamonds will drop drastically worldwide!

tty
Reply to  Bill
July 17, 2018 1:07 pm

I doubt that de Beers will be worried. It would be vastly simpler to make artificial gem-quality diamonds. It can be done already for small stones, but the cost is comparable to de Beers prices.

Reply to  Bill
July 17, 2018 4:08 pm

Drilling a borehole to a depth of 90-150 *miles* would be… There really isn’t a word to describe how DUMB this idea is.

This is about as worrisome for DeBeers as the collected works of Thomas Gold are worrisome to ExxonMobil… Is my sarcasm obvious?

Reply to  David Middleton
July 17, 2018 7:24 pm

De Light (Beer) Fully obvious. Is there any way to pitch it to the Flat Earth Society? Or get a grant to develop a 3-D printing process for diamonds? Or sell asteroid belt maps with the ‘likely to contain’ asteroids marked?

Johann Wundersamer
Reply to  Bill
July 17, 2018 9:47 pm

There’s diamonds ’nuff already in the vicinity.

People tend to think the bridal ring with small diamonds from Grandma must yield good money.

Forget about it: a new bridal ring for the daughter costs more than you got for Grandma’s.

whiten
July 17, 2018 12:06 pm

Sorry for commenting in this given subject a bit too late, and also for the following simple and probably silly question.

If when this 1-2% figure considered as per addressing the given mass estimation of diamonds under “there”, and if this considerd as a volume expression…
How much bigger and larger that “diamond volume” will be if and when compared to the entire land mass above sea level, when the later considered as expressed per a volume metric????

probably just a silly question!

My wild and most probably estimation guess consist as somewhere around of a figure round about 3x;
at the very least!!

and please do not mind any grammar errors….commenting by my “smart phone” 🙂

cheers

Reply to  whiten
July 17, 2018 7:30 pm

Need a big backhoe and a big dump truck for all those diamonds. Probably a lot of spare buckets and an arm extension or two. And a big island, or maybe a continent for storage. Simple is best! No such thing as a silly question. Silly answers, on the other hand ………….

Sharpshooter
July 17, 2018 5:53 pm

“Diamonds, render her speechless! — DeBeers advertisement.
“Diamonds: That’ll shut her up!” — Ron White

Sharpshooter
July 17, 2018 5:58 pm

“Diamonds, render her speechless” — DeBeers advertisement
“Diamonds…that’ll shut her up!” — Ron White