An ancient meteorite and high-energy X-rays have helped scientists
conclude a half century of effort to find, identify and characterize a
mineral that makes up 38 percent of the Earth.
And in doing so, a team of scientists led by Oliver Tschauner, a
mineralogist at the University of Las Vegas, clarified the definition of
the Earth's most abundant mineral -- a high-density form of magnesium
iron silicate, now called Bridgmanite -- and defined estimated
constraint ranges for its formation. Their research was performed at the
Advanced Photon Source, a U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of
Science User Facility located at DOE's Argonne National Laboratory.
The mineral was named after 1964 Nobel laureate and pioneer of
high-pressure research Percy Bridgman. The naming does more than fix a
vexing gap in scientific lingo; it also will aid our understanding of
the deep Earth.
To determine the makeup of the inner layers of the Earth, scientists
need to test materials under extreme pressure and temperatures. For
decades, scientists have believed a dense perovskite structure makes up
38 percent of the Earth's volume, and that the chemical and physical
properties of Bridgmanite have a large influence on how elements and
heat flow through the Earth's mantle. But since the mineral failed to
survive the trip to the surface, no one has been able to test and prove
its existence -- a requirement for getting a name by the International
Mineralogical Association.
Shock-compression that occurs in collisions of asteroid bodies in the
solar system create the same hostile conditions of the deep Earth --
roughly 2,100 degrees Celsius (3,800 degrees Farenheit) and pressures of
about 240,000 times greater than sea-level air pressure. The shock
occurs fast enough to inhibit the Bridgmanite breakdown that takes place
when it comes under lower pressure, such as the Earth's surface. Part
of the debris from these collisions falls on Earth as meteorites, with
the Bridgmanite "frozen" within a shock-melt vein. Previous tests on
meteorites using transmission electron microscopy caused radiation
damage to the samples and incomplete results.
So the team decided to try a new tactic: non-destructive
micro-focused X-rays for diffraction analysis and novel fast-readout
area-detector techniques. Tschauner and his colleagues from Caltech and
the GeoSoilEnviroCARS, a University of Chicago-operated X-ray beamline
at the APS at Argonne National Laboratory, took advantage of the X-rays'
high energy, which gives them the ability to penetrate the meteorite,
and their intense brilliance, which leaves little of the radiation
behind to cause damage.
The team examined a section of the highly shocked L-chondrite
meteorite Tenham, which crashed in Australia in 1879. The GSECARS
beamline was optimal for the study because it is one of the nation's
leading locations for conducting high-pressure research.
Bridgmanite grains are rare in the Tenhma meteorite, and they are
smaller than 1 micrometer in diameter. Thus the team had to use a
strongly focused beam and conduct highly spatially resolved diffraction
mapping until an aggregate of Bridgmanite was identified and
characterized by structural and compositional analysis.
This first natural specimen of Bridgmanite came with some surprises:
It contains an unexpectedly high amount of ferric iron, beyond that of
synthetic samples. Natural Bridgmanite also contains much more sodium
than most synthetic samples. Thus the crystal chemistry of natural
Bridgmanite provides novel crystal chemical insights. This natural
sample of Bridgmanite may serve as a complement to experimental studies
of deep mantle rocks in the future.
Prior to this study, knowledge about Bridgmanite's properties has
only been based on synthetic samples because it only remains stable
below 660 kilometers (410 miles) depth at pressures of above 230 kbar
(23 GPa). When it is brought out of the inner Earth, the lower pressures
transform it back into less dense minerals. Some scientists believe
that some inclusions on diamonds are the marks left by Bridgmanite that
changed as the diamonds were unearthed.
The team's results were published in the November 28 issue of the journal Science
as "Discovery of bridgmanite, the most abundant mineral in Earth, in a
shocked meteorite," by O. Tschauner at University of Nevada in Las
Vegas, N.V.; C. Ma; J.R. Beckett; G.R. Rossman at California Institute
of Technology in Pasadena, Calif.; C. Prescher; V.B. Prakapenka at
University of Chicago in Chicago, IL.
This research was funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, NASA, and NSF.
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