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Earth's core holds a vast reservoir of gold - and it's leaking towards the surface
Earth's core holds a vast reservoir of gold - and it's leaking towards the surface

Daily Mail​

time26-05-2025

  • Science
  • Daily Mail​

Earth's core holds a vast reservoir of gold - and it's leaking towards the surface

You might think the Earth's largest gold reserves are locked up at Fort Knox. But Earth's core is rich with the precious metal – and it's slowly making its way up towards us, according to a new study. Ultra-high precision analysis of volcanic rocks show Earth's core is 'leaking' into rocks above. And it's bringing gold and other precious metals with it. Dr Nils Messling, at Göttingen University's Department of Geochemistry, said: 'When the first results came in, we realised that we had literally struck gold! 'Our data confirmed that material from the core, including gold and other precious metals, is leaking into the Earth's mantle above.' More than 99.999 per cent of Earth's stores of gold lie buried under 2,900km (1,800 miles) of solid rock, locked away within the Earth's metallic core and far beyond the reaches of humankind. The team analysed rocks on the island of Hawaii, specifically looking at traces of the precious metal ruthenium (Ru). Compared to the Earth's rocky mantle, the metallic core contains a slightly higher abundance of a particular isotope called 100Ru. That's because this ruthenium, which was locked in the Earth's core together with gold and other precious metals when it formed 4.5 billion years ago, came from a different source than the scarce amount that is contained in the mantle today. These differences are so small it was impossible to detect them in the past. Now, new procedures developed by the research team made it possible to analyse them. The unusually high 100Ru levels they found in lava on the Earth's surface can only mean that these rocks ultimately originated from the boundary between the Earth's core and mantle. Professor Matthias Willbold, who also worked on the study, said: 'Our findings not only show that the Earth's core is not as isolated as previously assumed. 'We can now also prove that huge volumes of super-heated mantle material – several hundreds of quadrillion metric tonnes of rock – originate at the core-mantle boundary and rise to the Earth's surface to form ocean islands like Hawaii.' The findings mean that at least some of the precarious supplies of gold and other precious metals that we currently have access to may have come from the Earth's core. It's believed that when the Earth was forming, gold and other heavier elements sank down into its interior. As a result, the majority of gold we currently have access to on the Earth's surface was delivered here by meteors bombarding our planet. Other elements that could currently be 'leaking' out of the core include palladium, rhodium and platinum. Despite the findings it's unlikely these precious metals are emerging at a particularly fast rate. It would also be impossible to drill down to where the Earth's core begins – approximately 2,900km (1,800 miles) - to access the gold contained down there. The findings were published in the journal Nature. Earth has an unusually high proportion of precious metals near the surface, which is surprising, as they would usually be expected to settle down near the core of the planet. Until now, this has been explained by the 'late veneer' theory, which suggests that foreign objects hit Earth, and in the process deposited the precious metals near the surface. New computer simulations from the Tokyo Institute of Technology took into account the metal concentrations on Earth, the moon and Mars, and suggests that a huge collision could have brought all the precious metals to Earth at once. The researchers believe that this happened before the Earth's crust formed – around 4.45 billion years ago. The findings suggest that Earth's history could have been less violent than previously thought.

Scientists stunned to find Earth's core leaking gold and other precious metals
Scientists stunned to find Earth's core leaking gold and other precious metals

The Independent

time23-05-2025

  • Science
  • The Independent

Scientists stunned to find Earth's core leaking gold and other precious metals

A first-of-its-kind analysis of Hawaiian volcanic rocks has revealed that the Earth 's core is leaking gold and other precious metals into the surface above. Over 99.99 per cent of the Earth's deposits of gold and precious metals like Ruthenium lie locked away in its metallic core beneath 3,000km of solid rock and far beyond the reach of humankind. The precious metals were locked in the core when the planet formed 4.5bn years ago. 'Precious metals such as ruthenium are highly concentrated in the metallic core but extremely depleted in the silicate mantle,' researchers said in the analysis published on Wednesday in the journal Nature. The researchers, using new techniques, detected Ruthenium in volcanic rocks on the Earth's surface in levels that indicated their origin lay in the core-mantle boundary. The study found that volcanic basalt rocks from Hawaii had a much higher concentration of precious metals than the mantle did. 'Our data confirms that material from the core, including gold and other precious metals, is leaking into the mantle above,' study co-author Nils Messling from the University of Göttingen said. 'When the first results came in, we realised that we had literally struck gold!' The findings reveal that the Earth's core is not as isolated as previously believed. Once thought inaccessible, material from the core is ejected towards the surface during volcanic eruptions and could be studied in the future through such leaks. Forms of Ruthenium could act as a new tracer to further study core-mantle interaction, the researchers said. The new analysis shows that several hundred quadrillion metric tonnes of superheated material from near the core-mantle boundary rise to the Earth's surface to form ocean islands like Hawaii. This also means that at least some of the world's supplies of gold and other precious metals that we rely on now come from the core. However, researchers said, it remained to be seen whether the core-leaking process observed in the study existed in the past as well. 'Our findings open up an entirely new perspective on the evolution of the inner dynamics of our home planet,' the study noted.

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