Two giant spots in Earth’s mantle may explain Africa’s strange geology

3D view of the point on the Earth’s mantle below Africa, shown in red, yellow, and orange. Cyan represents the main mantle boundary, blue indicates the surface, and transparent gray indicates the continents. (Photo credit: Mingming Li / ASU)

Deep in the Earth’s mantle, there Two giant bubbles. One is under Africa and the other is almost opposite the first, under the Pacific Ocean. But these two points are not equally congruent.

New research finds that the point under Africa extends much closer to the surface – and is more unstable – than the point under the Pacific Ocean. This difference may help explain why the crust under Africa has risen to a higher level and why the continent has experienced many massive volcanic eruptions over hundreds of millions of years.

By Chris Skeldon

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