Is the Core Separate from the Mantle - Maybe Not
A correspondent sent me THIS LINK which looks at new evidence suggesting that material from the core is getting into the mantle and, eventually, to the Earths surface.
We have long been taught that the lighter mantle floats above the denser metallic core and that there cannot be movement between the two (except for earthquake waves).
But work on helium isotopes casts doubt about the separation. Helium-3 was formed just after the Big Bang and was confined to deep in the Earth, some believed it was confined to the core. Helium-4 is formed from the decay of uranium and thorium and is confined the mantle and the Earths surface. But then Helium-3 was found in volcanic lavas from mid-ocean ridges.
Ruthenium is an element with an affinity for iron and thus is concentrated in the iron-rich core. This applies particularly to Ruthenium-100. Other ruthenium isotopes came to Earth later via meteorites but Ruthenium-100 should be confined to the core. But it is now found at the surface.
So how is the core stuff getting into the mantle? Debate rages with a lot of attention being paid to two huge "blobs" - one under the Pacific and the other under Africa. These are believed to be hot but dense and supplying plumes leading to the surface. Are they "mining" the core or are they a bridge from the core to the surface.
Expect to hear more about this in the future.