Scientists discover a new mineral from the depths of the Earth

Until now, researchers believed the mineral could never be found on the earth's surface.
Sign up for the Freethink Weekly newsletter!
A collection of our favorite stories straight to your inbox

Scientists have discovered a new mineral that has never been seen before. And, to add to the marvel, the unearthed mineral was trapped inside a diamond. 

As rare as a diamond: Scientists found the new mineral davemaoite inside a diamond — an even rarer sight than the diamond itself. To call the new mineral rare is an understatement. Up until now, davemaoite had never before been seen. 

Since the 1970s, scientists had theorized the existence of this mineral — but now, they have proof. This is “the first time that lower mantle minerals have ever been observed in nature,” according to a press release from the University of Nevada, Las Vega which led the discovery. 

Davemaoite has a perovskite crystalline structure that can only be created under extreme pressure and heat, like the conditions found between 660 and 900 kilometers deep, in the Earth’s mantle, which lies between the crust and the core.

This is “the first time that lower mantle minerals have ever been observed in nature.”

If the mineral were to travel to the upper layers of the Earth, it would quickly break down into other minerals. That is why no one has seen it before. But this time, the new mineral was preserved inside a diamond, allowing it to move from deep in the Earth to where humans could find it. 

“It’s the strength of the diamond that keeps the inclusions at high pressure,” geochemist Oliver Tschauner, who led the discovery, told Nature. 

A diamond in the rough: The green diamond was unearthed from a mine in Botswana decades ago, so the new mineral has been hiding in plain sight ever since. Eventually, it made its way to George Rossman, a mineralogist at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. Then Rossman and Tschauner started taking a closer look at the gem a few years ago, blasting it with x-rays to reveal more details about the minerals within — including the presence of the mineral davemaoite.

“It’s the strength of the diamond that keeps the inclusions at high pressure.”

Oliver Tschauner

Tschauner named the mineral after Ho-kwang ‘Dave’ Mao, a geologist known for his pioneering work in high-pressure geochemistry. This specific diamond probably formed between 410 and 560 miles beneath the surface of the Earth, making it a “super-deep” diamond. The diamond that captured the mineral particles was robust enough to make it all the way to the surface undamaged, reports Popular Science. 

Tschauner’s team from the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, reported the discovery in the journal Science. They say the discovery gives a unique view into deep-Earth chemistry. 

“For jewelers and buyers, the size, color, and clarity of a diamond all matter, and inclusions—those black specks that annoy the jeweler—for us, they’re a gift,” Tschauner said in a statement

Davemaoite is composed mainly of calcium silicate. But it can collect radioactive isotopes that create a lot of heat deep in Earth’s mantle, the layer between the crust and core. That means the mineral is a critical part of how heat moves deep in the Earth, influencing plate tectonics, reports Nature. 

We’d love to hear from you! If you have a comment about this article or if you have a tip for a future Freethink story, please email us at [email protected].

Related
“Bionic eye” discovers Plato’s final resting place
Plato’s final resting place has been identified thanks to a “bionic eye” built to read the Herculaneum scrolls.
New AI translates 5,000-year-old cuneiform tablets instantly
Translating an ancient language is a time-intensive process, and only a few hundred experts are qualified to perform it. Could AI do the job?
Ancient technology that was centuries ahead of its time
These forward-thinking inventions are often called “ahead of their time.” They are reflections of the ingenuity of their civilizations.
We’re analysing DNA from ancient and modern humans to create a “family tree of everyone”
Genetic genealogy not only helps us understand where we came from, but it could also be used for tracing the origin of genetic mutations.
AI is helping decode the oldest story in the world
A new algorithm is helping decode ancient cuneiform tablets — including those containing the oldest known work of world literature.
Up Next
lidar data
Subscribe to Freethink for more great stories