Posted on 06/16/2014 3:14:38 PM PDT by WhiskeyX
First terrestrial discovery of an extremely rare mineral called ringwoodite confirms theory about huge water reservoirs 410 to 660 km beneath the surface of our planet, says a team of researchers led by Prof Graham Pearson from the University of Alberta, Canada.
(Excerpt) Read more at sci-news.com ...
There is also a Wikipedia article which describes ringwoodite and includes a color picture of the mineral whose composition is 1.5% water. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ringwoodite
It’s not liquid and “flowing” water, so don’t get the wrong idea, people.
meant to ping you to ‘4’. :)
It’s definitely interesting and that so much water is on this earth is very amazing. But I do hope that the creationists don’t jump on this as evidence of the “fountains of the deep” as spoken about in the Bible. I’m “with” the creationists, but not just to grab at anything willy-nilly.
They already have on the other threads.
Just follow the ‘water’ keyword.
Interesting indeed. :)
As drinkable as the water in concrete...
Interesting.I always wondered where God put all the water after the flood.
It’s there in the oceans ...
From the article:
’This sample really provides extremely strong confirmation that there are local wet spots...as much water as all the worlds oceans put together,’ Prof Pearson said...’The first land discovery of ringwoodite confirms the presence of huge water reservoirs beneath the surface of the Earth. Image credit: University of Alberta.’”
It’s just not in the form that you can pour ... that’s all ... :-) ...
Dehydration melting at the top of the lower mantle
http://www.sciencemag.org/content/344/6189/1265
“The discovery confirms about 50 years of theoretical and experimental work by geophysicists, seismologists and other scientists trying to understand the makeup of the Earths interior.”
Well, there it is, more grant money! I bet they were running on empty prior to this “incredible discovery”!
BTW, what does “confirms the theory...” really mean?
Look at the transoceanic trench, subduction zones, transition zone (410 km, 660 km), etc. Very interesting. Mount Judi, BTW, is a little less than 7,000 feet in elevation.
That would certainly explain why there is so much water being accumulated in that region of the mantle.
“BTW, what does ‘onfirms the theory...’really mean?”
It means the researchers had a number of good reasons to suspect water is incorporated into certain minerals to form new minerals under certain conditions of extreme pressure and heat. When researching a subject in the physical sciences, the researcher progresses from a conjecture to an hypothesis and then to a theory. Unfortunately, the word, theory, is all to often used in the wrong context when the correct word to use is an hypothesis. A conjecture is the first step by asking the question of whether an experiment may or may not demonstrate the existence of a proposed physical phenomenom. An hypothesis is the second step where an experiment is proposed to demonstrate the existence of a proposed physical phenomenom. A theory is the third step where enough hypotheses have been proposed, experimentally tested, and found to be true to make a provisional acceptance of the hypotheses to be generally true until such time the experimental testing of future hypotheses falsifies the previous hypotheses with new and more correct experimental results.
In the case of this mineral, the researchers had extraterrestrial samples of the water bearing mineral, but they had not yet discovered any terrestrial samples to compare with the extraterrestrial samples. This newly discovered terrestrial sample of the mineral was fortuitously incorporated as an inclusion in a diamond formed at the bottom of the continenatl plate and was transported within the diamond to the Earth’s surface by a volcanic eruption. Under different circumstances the mineral would likely have been dehydrated and transformed into a different mineral before it could reach the Earth’s surface, but the crystalline lattice of the diamond prevented the transformation of the mineral in this instance.
Having access to this mineral has finally confirmed the hypothesis and/or theory that such a mineral should exist in the Earth’s mantle. The basis for the hypothesis and/or theory before this discovery was the presence of the mineral in the extraterrestrial rocks contained in the asteroidal-meteoric rocks falling on the earth’s surface and the high pressure and high heat experiments in the laboratories. Having reason to suspect the mineral should be in the mantle because of the physical properties found outside the mantle was one thing, and discovering an actual sample of the mineral from the mantle was the experimental evidence it actually exists in the Earth’s mantle.
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