These findings may explain why some experimental evidence has been inconsistent with our current models of Earth’s structure.

The presence of an innermost layer has been suspected before, with hints that iron crystals that compose the inner core have different structural alignments.

“We are limited by the distribution of global earthquakes and receivers, especially at polar antipodes,” the team wrote in their paper, explaining the missing data decreases the certainty of their conclusions.

But their conclusions align with other studies on the anisotropy of the innermost inner core.

Future research may fill in some of these data gaps and allow scientists to corroborate or contradict their findings, and hopefully translate more stories written within this early layer of Earth’s history.

This research was published in the Journal of Geophysical Research.

An earlier version of this article was published in March 2021.