In an extraordinary breakthrough that delves deep into the cosmic past, an international consortium of scientists from Dresden, Sydney, and Canberra has uncovered rare signatures of radioactive isotopes embedded within a deep-sea manganese crust. This discovery provides unprecedented insights into the astrophysical phenomena responsible for forging the universe’s heaviest elements, particularly illuminating the timeline of the last significant r-process nucleosynthesis event in the solar system’s vicinity. Their findings, published in the esteemed journal Nature Astronomy, draw a cosmic map that stretches back over 100 million years, signaling the rarity and tremendous scale of cataclysmic events such as neutron star mergers or exceptionally energetic supernovae.
Ferromanganese crusts, mineral deposits found at profound ocean depths ranging from hundreds to thousands of meters, serve as unparalleled geological time capsules. These crusts accrete slowly—millimeters over millions of years—absorbing trace elements, including rare radioactive isotopes transported from distant cosmic events. By decoding these isotopic deposits, researchers can trace the history of cosmic explosions and paint a detailed portrait of stellar processes that shaped the chemical evolution of our galaxy.
Central to this research is the isotope plutonium-244, with its rare genesis through the rapid neutron-capture process, known simply as the r-process. During such events, atomic nuclei experience a rapid succession of neutron captures, instigating the synthesis of heavy elements beyond iron. Conditions conducive to this process are believed to arise predominantly during titanic neutron star collisions or hyper-energetic supernovae, events many orders of magnitude less frequent than typical supernova explosions. Detecting plutonium-244 within the Earth’s geological record offers direct evidence of these rare phenomena.
The team’s meticulous analyses utilized state-of-the-art detection methods to isolate and quantify iron-60, plutonium-244, and curium-247 isotopes in Pacific Ocean crust samples. Iron-60 serves as a definitive marker of conventional supernovae, and its isotope profile corresponded precisely to two well-documented near-Earth supernova events occurring within the past few million years. In stark contrast, plutonium-244 exhibited a distribution pattern dramatically different—one consistent with deposition over a much longer timespan, pointing to a rare cosmic event that transpired at least a hundred million years ago.
Intriguingly, plutonium-244’s widespread but time-extended presence suggests it did not originate from the same near-Earth supernovae that deposited iron-60. Instead, it implies an older, more distant event where the synthesized elements had ample time to diffuse through the interstellar medium, creating a diffuse veil of heavy atoms engulfing the solar neighborhood. This insight recalibrates our understanding of when and how the most massive elements were introduced into our galactic environment.
Adding further weight to this narrative is the absence of curium-247, another isotope forged by the r-process. Despite its pivotal role—curium-247 decays more rapidly than plutonium-244, with a half-life of approximately 15.6 million years—its conspicuous scarcity in the crust sample indicates no recent r-process activity within the last 100 million years. This “expiry date” phenomenon serves as a cosmic clock, reinforcing the conclusion that the solar system’s immediate neighborhood has been devoid of major r-process events for many millions of years.
The technical sophistication required for these measurements cannot be overstated. Detecting individual plutonium atoms amidst an ocean of roughly ten sextillion non-plutonium atoms illustrates the extraordinary sensitivity needed. Recent advancements at the VEGA facility in Sydney, led by Michael Hotchkis, have pushed the boundaries of accelerator mass spectrometry, enabling researchers to detect and map plutonium distribution layer by layer with unparalleled time resolution. This breakthrough is complemented by the pioneering use of the Heavy Ion Accelerator Facility in Canberra for iron-60 detection, underscoring the collaborative, multinational nature of this endeavor.
Furthermore, a comprehensive age model was constructed using beryllium-10 isotopes measured at the DREAMS facility in Dresden. These measurements were instrumental in refining the growth history of the ferromanganese crust, allowing the researchers to place each isotopic signature accurately within a cosmic timeline spanning more than ten million years. Coupled with advanced imaging techniques such as X-ray scanning and 3D reconstruction of smaller drill cores, the team assembled a remarkably precise chronicle of element deposition.
The implications of this research extend beyond the confines of our solar system. Prof. Anton Wallner, head of the Accelerator Mass Spectrometry and Isotope Research Department at HZDR, emphasized that the detected plutonium likely originated from extraordinarily rare cosmic explosions, such as neutron star mergers recently observed via gravitational waves—albeit occurring far outside our own galaxy. These discoveries not only challenge preexisting assumptions about local r-process events but also rule out alternative hypotheses, including the crossing of the solar system through dense interstellar clouds, as a source of these heavy elements.
This research heralds a new era in studying cosmic nucleosynthesis. Upcoming analyses involving lunar samples provided by NASA promise to enrich our understanding of recent r-process events further. Equally exciting is the anticipated operational commencement of the HAMSTER facility at HZDR, which aspires to replicate and surpass current detection capabilities. This facility aims to detect a broader spectrum of rare radionuclides, potentially unlocking fresh insights into the astrophysical origins of our universe’s elemental diversity.
In sum, the discovery of plutonium-244 traces scattered throughout ancient oceanic crust reframes our knowledge of cosmic history and nucleosynthesis. It reveals a universe punctuated by rare, monumental events that have imprinted an indelible trace on Earth’s geological archives. These findings not only illuminate the elemental assembly of the cosmos but also open up new frontiers for studying the universe’s most violent and transformative phenomena with unprecedented detail and temporal precision.
Subject of Research: Not applicable
Article Title: The timing of the last r-process event near Earth from interstellar 60Fe, 244Pu and 247Cm deposition on Earth
News Publication Date: 15-Jun-2026
Web References: http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41550-026-02841-6
References: Published in Nature Astronomy
Keywords
r-process nucleosynthesis, plutonium-244, curium-247, iron-60, deep-sea manganese crust, neutron star mergers, supernova, radioactive isotopes, accelerator mass spectrometry, interstellar medium, cosmic explosions, element formation

