 The team was working with a sample of rock that had been preserved in a crystal, as normally in the atmosphere it would rust, degrade and turn to soil. ‘It was a bit like Jurassic Park, where insects are trapped inside amber. We had an Olivine crystal and a little bit of magma was trapped inside it, that’s what allowed it to be preserved for 2.7 billion years. It’s only about 30 microns or 50 microns in size, sub-sub millimetre, and we were able to look at it using the synchrotron technique.’
The results revealed that the temperature of the earth’s mantle has cooled by 300 degrees Celsius over the 2.7 billion years. And Dr Berry is already applying the new method to different samples. ‘The project I was doing two weeks ago, at the Diamond Synchrotron, was to look at tiny fragments of meteorites that formed very early on in the solar system’s history, basically looking back in time at what the solar system was like at the very beginning, before the planets were formed and there was just a big mass of dust swirling around.’
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