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Rethinking Earth's Most Massive Eruption

volcano, volcano facts, volcano eruptions
The theory of plate tectonics is a relatively new scientific concept.
(Image credit: USGS.)

The origins of the lavas pouring out of Earth's largest ongoing volcanic eruptions are being challenged in this week's Nature. The eruptions are along the mid-ocean ridges that run for tens of thousands of miles though the deep sea. These are spreading centers where the Earth's crust is being pulled apart and partially melted rock wells up to continuously fill the voids – building vast amounts of new oceanic crust. But no one is arguing that part of the story.

What is in question is just how well we are interpreting the lavas from those eruptions and what they tell us about the rocks down in the Earth's mantle. This is a big deal, because the rocks at ocean spreading centers are among the very few ways we can study the Earth's mantle. The trick has always been to figure out what changes the deep sea lavas have undergone between the mantle and the time they erupt. Geochemists read the mineral structure of lava rocks to figure what the molten material was like when it was in the mantle.

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