Superplastic mantle minerals. Superplasticity is the ability of some crystalline materials to stretch up to several times their own length when heated. Although the minerals in Earth’s mantle don’t endure such large strains, circumstantial evidence suggests that superplasticity helps them respond to the subduction of continental plates and other tectonic processes. Now, a team led by Takehiko Hiraga of Tokyo University and Hidehiro Yoshida of Japan’s National Institute for Materials Science has found direct evidence that mantle minerals are indeed superplastic. Like other superplastic materials—real or presumed—those in the mantle are polycrystalline aggregates. For their study, Hiraga, Yoshida, and their team sintered nanoscale powders to make two analogues of mantle minerals, both of which consisted mostly of forsterite (Mg2SiO4). In the absence of strain, a superplastic material is made up of nanoscale grains of the majority component interspersed with smaller grains of the minority component. When...

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