EarthDate
Turns out it was much easier to go to outer space than to inner Earth. In the 1950s, the U.S. and Russia began competitive spaceflight programs. Twenty-five years later, the U.S. Voyager spacecraft had gone 10 billion miles into space. Around the same time, both countries also began drilling programs trying to pierce through Earth’s crust to reach the mantle below. The U.S. project began drilling off the coast of Mexico, because scientists had recognized that oceanic crust is thin, averaging only 4 miles thick, whereas continental crust could be 25 miles thick. But the project was defunded by Congress after only a test bore. The Russians began drilling on land, above the Arctic Circle, and kept at it for 20 years. In the end, they got 8 miles into the crust without ever reaching mantle. But last year, an international expedition on the Resolution, the drilling ship we discussed on a prior episode, set out for the Atlantis Massif. Discovered in the seventies, it’s a huge bulge that rises 14,000 feet above the mid-ocean seafloor. Here, the ocean crust is even thinner, separating into layers as it spreads apart, exposing deep rock that is normally far below Earth’s surface. By drilling less than a mile into this spreading area, the Resolution finally tapped into mantle and brought core samples to the surface—a geologic first, 66 years in the making!
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