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Drilling
the Crust
by
Stephen Marshak
To drill a well in solid rock, workers generally use a rotary drill,
which consists of a drill stem (a long steel tube, turned by a machine)
connected to a diamond-studded drill bit, which grinds the rock at
the base of the hole and transforms it into powder. Drill bits can
grind rock because the diamonds in the bit are harder than rock.
Because of the friction between rock and bit, the bit becomes very
hot. To keep the bit from melting, and to flush the pulverized rock
out of the hole they’re making, drillers constantly pump drilling
mud, a mixture of water and clay, into the hole. Drilling mud flows
down through the drill stem, out through holes in the bit, and up
through the space between the stem and the hole wall.
Typical commercial water-well drillers penetrate less than 100
meters (m) into the ground in their quest for underground water.
Oil-well drillers use much larger drills and commonly go to depths
of 1,000 m, on occasion to depths of 4–8 km. When drilling into the
Earth from a land-based site, workers simply set up a tower on the
ground to hold their machinery. In the past few decades, however,
the search for oil has led drillers to drill into the sea floor just
off a coast. In shallow, near-shore waters, offshore drillers set
up an anchored platform, whereas in deeper water, they work from
gigantic drilling platforms that float. Some platforms are huge,
housing crews of several dozen people at a time.
Geoscientists drill the crust simply to find out what’s below the
surface, to learn from older rocks about changes that have taken
place through Earth’s history. In the open ocean, scientists must
set up their drilling rig on a ship. In the early 1960s, a group
of scientists attempted to drill through the oceanic crust to reach
the mantle. Their project came to be known as Project Mohole because
they hoped to drill a "hole to the Moho." Unfortunately,
the attempt failed. A successful program of ocean drilling, the Deep
Sea Drilling Project (DSDP), began in the late 1960s. Year after
year, the drilling ship Glomar Challenger crisscrossed the sea, ultimately
drilling several hundred holes, from 300 m to 2 km deep, in water
depths of up to 5 km. From these drill cores of ocean sediments,
marine geologists were able to make many discoveries, such as the
nature of climate changes over the last 150 million years, the causes
of ice ages, the age of the ocean floor, and many other amazing revelations.
In more recent years, scientists have used a larger ship, the Joides
Resolution, for such open-ocean drilling; this ship provides the
platform for the Ocean Drilling Project (ODP), the successor to DSDP.
Perhaps the most impressive on-land scientific drilling has been
in operation for many years on the Kola Peninsula, north of the Arctic
Circle in Russia. This superdeep hole reaches a depth of about 12
km and may ultimately reach 15 km. Unfortunately, drilling deep holes
is prohibitively expensive (costing tens of millions of dollars per
deep hole), and drilling holes much deeper than about 15 km simply
can’t be done using available technology, because the drill bit melts
and the cuttings in the hole can’t be flushed out.
For more information about the Ocean Drilling Project see Life
Onboard JOIDES Resolution
Other Feature Articles
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