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Boring Through The
Crust Of The Earth By James Donahue August 2005 We noticed a report not
long ago that a scientific team comprising The Integrated Ocean Drilling Program recently drilled a hole successfully through
the outer crust of the Earth and reached the “Mojo.” Mojo is a nickname for
the Mohorovicic discontinuity, or a division between the crust and the hot mantle. The hole, drilled on
the floor of the Having once worked among
the oil well drilling rigs in my younger years, I wondered why a mile-deep hole in the ground was considered such an important
milestone. Some of the rigs I worked around went at least 2000 feet down within weeks and we didn’t think much of it. One Alaskan drill site,
believed to be among the deepest in the world, went to 20,203 feet. Some of the copper mines in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan
are known to have been dug my miners to depths of over a mile. It is said the gold mines
in The deepest research
borehole known was drilled in So with all of this digging
and drilling that has been going on for decades, what is the significance of the Moho Project? The National Science Foundation
claims it is the third deepest hole ever made in the floor of the sea and that rocks brought back to the surface are giving
new information about the composition of the Earth. Geologist Barbara John
said in a story for Live Science that further drilling is expected, following a complete analysis of the material removed
from the drilling to date. “Our major result
is that we’ve recovered the lower crust for the first time and have confirmed that the Earth’s crust at this locality
is more complicated than we thought.” Once the drill gets into
the mantle, the geologists will know it because the material brought up will have different texture and chemistry. The project is expected
to continue for 10 years at a cost of $1.5 billion. And that begs the question . . . is the information they glean from the
work going to be worth the price? This planet has had so
many natural upheavals from exploding volcanoes and large objects colliding from space that studying the composition of the
underside of our planet should not be that difficult, or complicated. The natural movement
of the planet’s plates are forcing the constant upheaval of land mass which exposes material from deep in the Earth. There is a large hole
in the earth at Vredefort, South Africa, where a giant meteorite or asteroid slammed into the Earth over 2000 million years
ago, blasting a hole 25 kilometers deep and causing the crust of the Earth to blow outward, bringing the deep crustal rocks
right to the surface. We might suggest that
these scientists use some of this cash to buy plane fares to |
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