The effects of Cambrian Explosion in deep mantle: TGD point of viewThere was an interesting popular article titled "Traces of life in the Earth's deep mantle" in Phys-Org (see this). The article told about the work of Giuliani et all about discussed in the article "Perturbation of the deep-Earth carbon cycle in response to the Cambrian Explosion" (see this). The sudden emergence of advanced multicellular lifeforms in the Cambrian Explosion (CE) about 540 Ma ago is still one of the great mysteries of mainstream biology. The team led by ETH researcher Andrea Giuliani found in rocks from deep mantle what can be regarded as traces of CE. The proposal is that partly organic material would have been subducted to the deep mantle after CE and changed the isotopic compositions of Carbon and other elements. Also other elements, for instance strontium and hafnium showed a pattern similar to carbon. The group of Giuliani examined rare diamond-containing volcanic rocks known as kimberlites from different epochs of the Earth's history. These special rocks originate from the lowest regions of the Earth's mantle. The isotopic composition of carbon in about 150 samples of these special rocks was determined. The composition of younger kimberlites, which are less than 250 million years old, was found to vary considerably from that of older rocks. In many of the younger samples, the composition of the carbon isotopes is outside the range that would be expected for typical rocks from the mantle. The isotope ratio R=13C/12C for Carbon in the deep mantle is considerably lower for the kimberlites younger than 250 Ma whereas the value for kimberlites older than 250 Ma is typical mantle value. The values of younger kimberlites are also more variable. More quantitatively, δ(13C)= (Rsample/Rstandard -1)× 103 serves as a parameter. For a typical sample from the mantle, the value is δ ≈ -5+/- 1 per mille whereas for the studied samples δ is in the range [-20.-30] per mille. The increased subduction caused by plate tectonics of the material from the surface of Earth could explain this. The estimate is that it takes 200 Ma for the material from the surface to reach the lower mantle. In the standard geology, the natural interpretation is that the dramatic increase in the generation of organic matter in CE has reduced the carbon isotope ratio. One must however assume that the partly organic material from the surface should have ended down to the deep mantle along specific routes by subduction. Is the TGD inspired hypothesis for Cambrian Explosion life consistent with these findings?
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