PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Diamonds in Earth's oldest zircons are nothing but laboratory contamination

UC Riverside-led research team claims the oldest 'diamonds' on the Earth are simply fragments of polishing compound

2013-12-19
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Iqbal Pittalwala
iqbal@ucr.edu
951-827-6050
University of California - Riverside
Diamonds in Earth's oldest zircons are nothing but laboratory contamination UC Riverside-led research team claims the oldest 'diamonds' on the Earth are simply fragments of polishing compound

RIVERSIDE, Calif. — As is well known, the Earth is about 4.6 billion years old. No rocks exist, however, that are older than about 3.8 billion years. A sedimentary rock section in the Jack Hills of western Australia, more than 3 billion years old, contains within it zircons that were eroded from rocks as old as about 4.3 billion years, making these zircons, called Jack Hills zircons, the oldest recorded geological material on the planet.

In 2007 and 2008, two research papers reported in the journal Nature that a suite of zircons from the Jack Hills included diamonds, requiring a radical revision of early Earth history. The papers posited that the diamonds formed, somehow, before the oldest zircons — that is, before 4.3 billion years ago — and then were recycled repeatedly over a period of 1.2 billion years during which they were periodically incorporated into the zircons by an unidentified process.

Now a team of three researchers, two of whom are at the University of California, Riverside, has discovered using electron microscopy that the diamonds in question are not diamonds at all but broken fragments of a diamond-polishing compound that got embedded when the zircon specimen was prepared for analysis by the authors of the Nature papers.

"The diamonds are not indigenous to the zircons," said Harry Green, a research geophysicist and a distinguished professor of the Graduate Division at UC Riverside, who was involved in the research. "They are contamination. This, combined with the lack of diamonds in any other samples of Jack Hills zircons, strongly suggests that there are no indigenous diamonds in the Jack Hills zircons."

Study results appear online this week in the journal Earth and Planetary Science Letters.

"It occurred to us that a long-term history of diamond recycling with intermittent trapping into zircons would likely leave some sort of microstructural record at the interface between the diamonds and zircon," said Larissa Dobrzhinetskaya, a professional researcher in the Department of Earth Sciences at UCR and the first author of the research paper. "We reasoned that high-resolution electron microscopy of the material should be able to distinguish whether the diamonds are indeed what they have been believed to be."

Using an intensive search with high-resolution secondary-electron imaging and transmission electron microscopy, the research team confirmed the presence of diamonds in the Jack Hills zircon samples they examined but could readily identify them as broken fragments of diamond paste that the original authors had used to polish the zircons for examination. They also observed quartz, graphite, apatite, rutile, iron oxides, feldspars and other low-pressure minerals commonly included into zircon in granitic rocks.

"In other words, they are contamination from polishing with diamond paste that was mechanically injected into silicate inclusions during polishing" Green said.

The research was supported by a grant from the National Science Foundation.

Green and Dobrzhinetskaya were joined in the research by Richard Wirth at the Helmholtz Centre Potsdam, Germany.

Dobrzhinetskaya and Green planned the research project; Dobrzhinetskaya led the project; she and Wirth did the electron microscopy.



INFORMATION:

The University of California, Riverside is a doctoral research university, a living laboratory for groundbreaking exploration of issues critical to Inland Southern California, the state and communities around the world. Reflecting California's diverse culture, UCR's enrollment has exceeded 21,000 students. The campus opened a medical school in 2013 and has reached the heart of the Coachella Valley by way of the UCR Palm Desert Center. The campus has an annual statewide economic impact of more than $1 billion. A broadcast studio with fiber cable to the AT&T Hollywood hub is available for live or taped interviews. UCR also has ISDN for radio interviews. To learn more, call (951) UCR-NEWS.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

New study reveals the biomechanics of how marine snail larvae swim

2013-12-19
New study reveals the biomechanics of how marine snail larvae swim Equipped with high-speed, high-resolution video, scientists have discovered important new information on how marine snail larvae swim, a key behavior that determines individual ...

Angelina Jolie's preventive mastectomy raised awareness, but not knowledge of breast cancer risk

2013-12-19
Angelina Jolie's preventive mastectomy raised awareness, but not knowledge of breast cancer risk Survey of Americans suggests a lack of understanding of genetic risk following Jolie's public announcement of her preventive double mastectomy College Park, MD – Angelina Jolie ...

Diet quality links old and young

2013-12-18
Diet quality links old and young Understanding how dietary habits are connected through the generations could have valuable benefits for community health, a new study shows. The Taiwanese study assessed the relationship between the quality of children's diets ...

Brain area attacked by Alzheimer's links learning and rewards

2013-12-18
Brain area attacked by Alzheimer's links learning and rewards Crucial linkage normally helps brain step up to new challenges DURHAM, N.C. -- One of the first areas of the brain to be attacked by Alzheimer's disease is more active when the brain isn't working very hard, ...

Going against the flow: Halting atherosclerosis by targeting micro RNA

2013-12-18
Going against the flow: Halting atherosclerosis by targeting micro RNA Researchers at Emory and Georgia Tech have developed a potential treatment for atherosclerosis that targets a master controller of the process. The results are scheduled for publication Dec. ...

New guidelines for management of high blood pressure released

2013-12-18
New guidelines for management of high blood pressure released A new guideline for the management of high blood pressure, developed by an expert panel and containing nine recommendations and a treatment algorithm (flow chart) to help doctors treat patients ...

Scientists find a groovy way to influence specialization of stem cells

2013-12-18
Scientists find a groovy way to influence specialization of stem cells Researchers at Queen Mary University of London have shown for the first time that the specialised role stem cells go on to perform is controlled by primary cilia –tiny hair-like ...

Mass shootings will not substantially decrease with more armed guards or background checks

2013-12-18
Mass shootings will not substantially decrease with more armed guards or background checks Criminology scholars debunk 11 myths about mass murder in a special issue of Homicide Studies Los Angeles, CA (December 5, 2013) With the one-year anniversary of the ...

Study led by NUS scientists provides new insights into cause of human neurodegenerative disease

2013-12-18
Study led by NUS scientists provides new insights into cause of human neurodegenerative disease Research team identified Neurexin2 as a novel target for potential therapy of neurodegeneration in Spinal Muscular Atrophy patients Singapore, 18 December ...

Debate continues on impact of artificial sweeteners

2013-12-18
Debate continues on impact of artificial sweeteners New research from the University of Adelaide has added to the debate about how our bodies respond to artificial sweeteners and whether they are good, bad or have no effect on us. In a study published ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Insilico Medicine and Taigen achieves license agreement to develop and commercialize AI-driven PHD inhibitor for anemia of Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)

Exploring dominant endophytic Pleosporales in grasses: New taxonomic insights in the suborder Massarineae

Comparative transcriptomic analysis of human maxillary and mandibular tooth germs reveals discrepancies in gene expression patterns

Scientists detect atmosphere on molten rocky exoplanet - study

Chip-scale magnetometer uses light for high-precision magnetic sensing

Illinois Tech biomedical engineering professor Philip R. Troyk elected as Fellow of the National Academy of Inventors

The National Academy of Inventors welcomes 2025 Class of Fellows

Multi-scale modelling framework predicts mechanical responses of Fe–Cr–Al alloys across composition and processing conditions

Preoperative radiation may improve antitumor immune response in most common form of breast cancer

Breast MRI may be safely omitted from diagnostic workup in certain patients with early-stage, HR-negative breast cancer

Sentinel lymph node biopsy may be safely omitted in some patients with early-stage breast cancer

Rats may seek cannabis to cope with stress

New FAU research strengthens evidence linking alcohol use to cancer

Gut health à la CAR T

Dr. Pengfei Liu receives 2026 O'Donnell Award in Medicine for pioneering advances in genetic diagnostics and rare disease treatment

Dr. Yunsun Nam receives 2026 O'Donnell Award in Biological Sciences for pioneering RNA research transforming gene regulation and cancer therapy

Dr. Bilal Akin wins 2026 O'Donnell Award in Engineering for transformative work in EV energy systems and industrial automation

Dr. Fan Zhang receives 2026 O'Donnell Award in Physical Sciences for groundbreaking discoveries in quantum matter and topological physics

Dr. Yue Hu receives 2026 O'Donnell Award for revolutionizing energy operations with real-time AI and reinforcement learning

Greater risk that the political right falls for conspiracy theories

JMC Publication: Insilico’s AI platforms enable discovery of potent, selective, oral DGKα inhibitor to overcome checkpoint resistance

Targeting collagen signaling boosts drug delivery in pancreatic cancer

Valvular heart disease is common in cancer patients but interventions improve survival

When socially responsible investing backfires

Cuffless blood pressure technologies in wearable devices show promise to transform care

AI-based tool predicts future cardiovascular events in patients with angina

Researchers map how the cerebellum builds its connections with the rest of the brain during early development

Routine scans could detect early prostate radiotherapy changes

Fairness in AI: Study shows central role of human decision-making

Pandemic ‘beneath the surface’ has been quietly wiping out sea urchins around the world

[Press-News.org] Diamonds in Earth's oldest zircons are nothing but laboratory contamination
UC Riverside-led research team claims the oldest 'diamonds' on the Earth are simply fragments of polishing compound