Diamonds - clues included
A study of Brazilian diamonds by Earth scientists from the University of Bristol has found that tiny inclusions in the diamonds contain traces of oceanic crust and sedimentary rocks, formed originally on the surface of the Earth then transported to depths of more than 300km. The plate tectonic process of subduction transports materials from Earth's outermost layers to the deep interior, hundreds of kilometres below our feet. Traces of these deeply subducted materials can be imaged remotely by seismology or geochemistry. However, sampling them directly is very difficult - the deepest hole ever drilled is a mere 12.2 km, and yet the centre of Earth is 6,400 km away. As a result, our only direct insights into Earth materials below about 200 km depth come from diamonds. Whilst most diamonds are valued for their clarity and purity, rarely they contain tiny inclusions of minerals, trapped when the diamond grew. University of Bristol Earth scientists Galina Bulanova, Michael Walter, Chris Smith, Lora Armstrong, Simon Kohn, and Jon Blundy have been studying these tiny inclusions, less than a hair's breadth across, from diamonds in the Juina region of central Brazil.


