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Deep Carbon Cycle NEWS

Latest News and Articles

Stay up-to-date with the latest research and articles on the deep carbon cycle — how carbon travels between Earth’s surface and its deep interior over millions to billions of years. Discover surprising pathways of carbon release (like continental rifting zones), how mantle redox conditions regulate carbon fate, what role diamonds play in Earth’s interior carbon story, and how deep Earth carbon degassing impacts climate and geology.

How Diamonds Shape Our Understanding of Mantle Geodynamics

Diamonds are one of the most coveted and enigmatic substances on Earth. They’re known for their exceptional beauty and rarity, but they also hold invaluable secrets about our planet’s inner workings. Formed under extreme pressure and temperature conditions, diamonds are more than just a symbol of luxury—they are nature’s time

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Volcanoes: Nature’s Carbon Release Valves

Volcanoes are more than just fiery spectacles—they play an essential role in regulating the Earth’s carbon cycle and climate. While we often think of volcanic eruptions as dramatic events that disrupt local environments, they are also a crucial part of the planet’s natural system for controlling carbon levels. These mighty

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Understanding The Earth’s Hidden Engine

Earth is a dynamic and ever-changing planet, shaped by a variety of natural processes. While many people are familiar with surface-level phenomena like the water cycle or weather patterns, there’s a much deeper, less visible system that plays a critical role in maintaining the planet’s carbon balance. Often referred to

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Workshop Delivers New Estimate of Global Carbon Degassing

Twenty-eight DCO members came together from 29 April  –  4 May, 2018 at the Carnegie Institution for Science in Washington, DC to calculate a new estimate of global carbon dioxide (CO2) degassing from large volcanic emitters, small volcanic sources and diffuse degassing from volcanic regions. The synthesis of massive amounts

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Job Opening: Postdoctoral Research Associate

Applications were invited for a highly qualified and motivated postdoctoral research scientist with a geologic background in computational geophysical fluid dynamics, whose primary responsibility will be to develop new codes to study carbon transport in numerical models of fluid flow in subduction zones.

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Melting Temperature of Earth’s Mantle Depends on Water

A joint study between Carnegie and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution has determined that the average temperature of Earth’s mantle beneath ocean basins was about 110 degrees Fahrenheit (60 Celsius) higher than previously thought, due to water present in deep minerals. The results are published in Science. Earth’s mantle, the

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Live Blog: Trail by Fire 1.5 expedition to South America

The atmosphere that allows our planet to sustain life formed from gases emitted by volcanoes early in Earth’s history. These volatile elements are constantly recycled back into the deep Earth at subduction zones, where tectonic plates sink into the mantle. During this process the sinking plate was subjected to increasing

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Deep Mantle Chemistry Surprise: Carbon Content not Uniform

Even though carbon was one of the most abundant elements on Earth, it was actually very difficult to determine how much of it exists below the surface in Earth’s interior. Research by Deep Carbon Observatory scientists Marion Le Voyer, Erik Hauri (Carnegie Institution for Science, USA), Katherine Kelley (University of

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