Earth’s Hidden Layer: How Tiny Particles Tell a Big Story
Sanjiang Plain, ChinaWed May 20 2026
The Sanjiang Plain was explored through 287 cores taken from nine deep holes. Scientists measured rare earth metals, common rock elements, acidity and plant leftovers in each layer. Their goal was to see how these metals stack up from the surface down and what shapes that pattern.
The metal story is all about grain size. Tiny bits smaller than 165 microns hold more of the element europium, but in a different way: they show a dip for that metal and lower ratios of lanthanum to lutetium, and neodymium to ytterbium. Larger grains above that threshold keep europium lower but bring up those same ratios.
Why the split? Rough particles weather less. They keep the original mix of metals from where the rocks came. Fine grains weather more fiercely, turning feldspar into clay and letting iron and manganese from the rock seep out. Those ions lock onto the tiny particles, pulling in more rare earths and creating a higher overall load. The same feldspar breakdown also reduces europium, explaining its depletion in the finer layers.
Near the surface, some coarse layers mimic fine ones. Human activity is to blame: added plant matter sticks to the surface soil and grabs extra rare earths, giving coarse grains a taste of the fine‑grained signature.
The study shows that what we see on the ground is a mix of natural weathering and human touch, all recorded in how tiny particles stack up with depth.
https://localnews.ai/article/earths-hidden-layer-how-tiny-particles-tell-a-big-story-cedab36
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