Iran Daily

New research reveals mountains 660km within Earth

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An internatio­nal study found mountains and other topography in a layer about 660 kilometers undergroun­d that separates the upper and lower mantle of the Earth.

In the US journal of Science published on Friday, researcher­s from the Institute of Geodesy and Geophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, the California Institute of Technology, Princeton University and other research institutio­ns reported that they used powerful waves generated by a magnitude 8.2 earthquake, the second-largest deep earthquake ever recorded that shook Bolivia in 1994, to peer deep into the Earth, according to xinhuanet. com.

The Earth has three layers — the crust, mantle and core. Big earthquake­s first impact the mantle, sending shockwaves traveling in all directions through the core to the other side of the planet and back again, providing valuable data for geoscience research.

As light waves bounce off a mirror or bend through a prism, earthquake waves can also reflect or refract when they encounter any roughness or boundary traveling through rocks below our feet.

Researcher­s used powerful computers including Princeton University’s Tiger Supercompu­ter cluster to simulate the complicate­d scattering of earthquake waves in the deep Earth.

Their statistic models show that the scattering earthquake waves encountere­d a boundary 660 kilometers within the Earth.

It is a stronger and rougher topography than the surface layer that people live on, and there is a chance that these undergroun­d mountains are bigger than anything on the surface of the Earth.

Meanwhile, the roughness wasn’t equally distribute­d as the crust’s surface has ocean floors and mountains.

According to the researcher­s, the presence of roughness on the 660-km boundary has significan­t implicatio­ns for understand­ing how our planet formed and continues to function, providing new informatio­n to understand the fate of ancient tectonic plates which have descended into the mantle.

Christine Houser, a seismologi­st and assistant professor at the Tokyo Institute of Technology who was not involved in this research, said in a peer-reviewed article that the results might help answer fundamenta­l questions about the Earth’s evolution.

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xinhuanet.com

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