TransWikia.com

How do subsurface oceans form under a rocky crust?

Earth Science Asked on June 29, 2021

New data about Ceres has just been released. Raymond et al. (2020) show the existence of gravity anomalies interpreted as low density pockets of brine under the crust. They show how impacts can trigger eruption of this brine onto the surface.

I understand how a low density layer can remain trapped under a higher density layer by lack of pores and/or fractures to rise through by buoyancy. However, I cannot figure how it got trapped there in the first place? For subsurface oceans under an icy crust (like Europa), I can imagine a simple freezing mechanism, but Ceres has a rocky crust.

Wikipedia’s Ocean World – Formation goes:

Since water is highly soluble in magma, a large fraction of the
planet’s water content will initially be trapped in the mantle. As the
planet cools and the mantle begins to solidify from the bottom up,
large amounts of water (between 60% and 99% of the total amount in the
mantle) are exsolved to form a steam atmosphere, which may eventually
condense to form an ocean.

But it doesn’t really help as it applies to surface oceans only. Neither does Extraterrestrial oceans on that particular matter.

How do subsurface oceans form under a rocky crust?

One Answer

As Jean-Marie Prival comments, Ceres doesn't have a rocky crust. It has an icy crust in which rocky matter is embedded from asteroid impacts. I'd rather see this comment turned into an answer than reinvent the wheel on that dwarf planet. In case they "die", the relevant comments are quoted below the main body of the answer..

Instead, here I consider a celestial body closer at hand. Earth does not have a subterranean ocean but it can produce water deep in the mantle, extracted from rock. As described in this answer from Space Exploration Stack Exchange, a high-pressure solid phase of water, Ice VII, has been identified as inclusions in diamonds; the presence of these inclusions implies that water exists in the molecular state ($text{H}_2text{O}$) as distinct from hydroxyl groups in minerals. The water is first trapped as a supercritical fluid as the diamonds form deep in the mantle, then condenses to Ice VII as the diamonds cool at the surface but retain mantle-level pressures internally.

Water in Earth's mantle likely does not come directly from surface oceans, but from hydroxide-bearing minerals in the rock. When the rock is cycled downwards by plate tectonics, it becomes hot enough to decompose the hydroxides (hydroxides of silicon, aluminum, iron, calcium, and magnesium, the elements to which hydroxyl groups are most likely to be bound in crustal rocks, all decompose well below 1000°C), thus generating the subterranean water.


Previous comments

There seems to be a whole bunch of publications on the matter: nature.com/articles/s41550-020-1146-8, nature.com/articles/s41550-020-1019-1, nature.com/articles/s41561-020-0581-6. I don't have access to all of them (too expensive ...). Maybe there's some useful information on the matter. – user20217 Aug 12 at 12:59

Interesting! The first one states that "the interior of Ceres consists of (1) a thin lag deposit (regolith) layer, (2) an icy crust that contains the bulk of an origin ocean [...]". That would explain a lot, the rocky layer being created on top of the icy surface by impacts. What got me was this passage in doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-15973-8 : "Ceres [...] is partially differentiated into a rocky interior and a comparatively more volatile-rich crust, which is composed of rock, salts, clathrates, and ≤ 40% water ice." Looks like the crust might not be so "rocky" after all... – Jean-Marie Prival Aug 12 at 14:10

Correct answer by Oscar Lanzi on June 29, 2021

Add your own answers!

Ask a Question

Get help from others!

© 2024 TransWikia.com. All rights reserved. Sites we Love: PCI Database, UKBizDB, Menu Kuliner, Sharing RPP