Researchers studying volcanic formations on Baffin Island, Canada have uncovered an unusually high concentration of helium-3 (3He). This finding supports the theory that this rare helium variant has emanated from Earth's core for millennia.
Alongside this, helium-4 (4He) was detected in the same area. While helium-4 is abundant on Earth, its kin, helium-3, is more common in extraterrestrial environments.
Forrest Horton, an associate scientist at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, revealed to media that “3He is rare in Earth because it has not been produced in or added to the planet in significant quantities and it is lost to space…As Earth’s rocky portion stirs and convects like hot water on a stovetop, material ascends, cools, and sinks. During the cooling stage, helium is lost to the atmosphere and then to space.”
Baffin Island: Goldmine of Scientific Discoveries
Baffin Island, situated in Nunavut, stands as Canada's largest island and ranks fifth in size globally. During her 2003 doctoral studies at the University of Edinburgh, Solveigh Lass-Evans identified an intriguing ratio of helium-3 to helium-4 in the island's volcanic rocks. Her discoveries were later detailed in the journal Nature.
The composition of a planet reflects its elemental origins, and helium-3 leaks from Earth's core suggest it formed from a solar nebula triggered by a nearby supernova.
In 2018, Horton and his team studied ancient lava on Baffin Island to explore rocks that might reveal information about Earth's core and mantle, the solid layer beneath its surface. The research team found that Arctic rocks contained higher levels of helium-3 and helium-4 than previously reported, with about 10 million helium-3 atoms per gram of olivine crystals, indicating that gases from the solar nebula during the formation of the solar system might be better preserved in Earth than initially believed.
Uncovering Earth's Past
How did helium-3 become a component of Baffin Island’s rocks? One theory suggests the genesis of the universe — the Big Bang — as the pivotal moment when vast quantities of hydrogen and helium were dispersed, eventually shaping galaxies.
Researchers posit that our solar system took shape around 4.5 billion years ago from a solar nebula. In the aftermath of a supernova, the debris converged into a rotating disk, which, as NASA suggests, eventually birthed our Sun and its orbiting planets.
Helium is believed to have been trapped in Earth's core during our planet's early formation, turning it into a noble gas haven. As helium-3 seeped out, it journeyed upward via magma plumes in the mantle, culminating in eruptions on Baffin Island.
Is Helium Hazardous?
Recent studies support the theory that helium-3 has been seeping from Earth's core, though scientists remain uncertain about the inception of this phenomenon.
Horton explained that helium's leakage from Earth's core poses no threat to the planet or humans, given the noble gas's inert nature. Additionally, he shared that the researchers are keen to explore if the core holds other light elements, possibly explaining the unexpected density of Earth's outer core.