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Deep in western Russia, the frigid desert contains the remnants of one of the most ambitious
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scientific experiments ever performed. It's a ruin now, a wasteland of jagged metal and
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crumbling concrete.
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If you search around long enough, you will find a rusted disc, bolted to the earth. So
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unassuming that you might even try to pick it up. But you won't be able to.
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It's the welded-shut cap of a borehole that plummets more than twelve kilometers into
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the earth, deeper than the deepest depths of the ocean. It's the deepest hole on earth.
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It's called the Kola Superdeep Borehole, and its existence has nothing to do with petroleum
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exploration. Rather, when drilling began in 1970, Soviet scientists hoped to eventually
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drill down to fifteen thousand meters in order to gain a better understanding of the nature
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of the Earth's crust. Because the truth is, we know less about what's under our feet than
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what's on the other side of the solar system.
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They drilled on and off for twenty-four years, and though they didn't quite reach their goal
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when work came to a halt in 1994, the engineers had reached a record depth: 12,262 meters,
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a record that still stands today.
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Two decades later, the Kola Borehole remains a remarkable technological and scientific
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acheivement. To drill it, engineers devised a new method by which only the drill bit at
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the end of the shaft was rotated, the lubricant, in this case, pressurized drilling mud, was
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pumped down through a custom drill bit, allowing it to spin. Instruments had to be invented
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to take measurements at the bottom of the hole.
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What did we learn by drilling a third of the way through the Baltic continental crust?
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For one, there's water down there, at depths scientists didn't believe water could be found.
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They suspect that the water formed from hydrogen and oxygen that were squeezed out of rock
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crystals due to crazy high levels of pressure that far down.
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Unlike groundwater, this water originated from the rock minerals themselves. Never before
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had this been observed. Also surpising, how about microscopic fossils discovered by Russians
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at depths of up to 6.7 kilometers?
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Researchers catalogued twenty-four species of single-cell plankton microfossils over
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the course of the project, and they weren't found in the kinds of deposits we're used
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to finding them, like limestone and silica.
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These were covered by organic carbon and nitrogen compounds, preserved thanks to those high
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pressures and high temperatures so far below the surface. As for those temperatures, by
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the time the engineers broke through the twelve kilometer mark, where rock samples were dated
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at 2.7 billion years old, the heat became a major issue.
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Researchers thought the temperature of the rocks would be about 100 degrees Celsius.
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What they found were temperatures in excess of 180 degrees. It was this heat that caused
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the drilling to come to a stop. Engineers described the rocks at 12 kilometers as acting
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more like plastic than rock.
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Of course, as astonishing as this project was, the Kola Superdeep Borehole only made
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it through a tiny fraction of the Earth's layers. 12 kilometers is three times as deep
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as humans have ever gone, but the eath's mantle desn't even begin until about 35 kilometers
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below the surface.
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The mantle then continues for another twenty-eight hundred kilometers; the center of the inner
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core: more than sixty-three hundred kilometers below the surface.
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Put another way, this borehole which took 24 years to drill, made it roughly 0.002 percent
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of the way to the middle of the Earth. It's a big planet, you guys.
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