Far beneath Earth's surface, slow-moving convection currents churn within the mantle. These currents are closely tied to the movement of tectonic plates, and they do more than just shift the plates above. They also stretch and distort the mantle material itself. A new study published in The Seismic Record shows that much of this deformation in the deepest part of the mantle occurs in regions where scientists believe ancient tectonic slabs have sunk over millions of years. Global Map Reveals Deformation Near the Core Scientists had long suspected a connection between deep mantle deformation and these buried slabs, but this research provides the first global view. The team examined nearly 75% of the lowermost mantle, a layer located just above the core-mantle boundary about 2,900 kilometers (1,800 miles) below Earth's surface. Jonathan Wolf of the University of California, Berkeley, and his colleagues built this global map using an enormous dataset.…