Geoscientists drill down into the ocean for a record-breaking close-up of Earth's mantle


Geoscientists have made an unprecedented achievement on their 60-year quest to know more about Earth’s mysterious depths. 

Pieces of Earth’s rocky mantle were collected by a drilling vessel called the JOIDES Resolution about a mile beneath the North Atlantic ocean floor at an underwater mountain called Atlantis Massif – located on a special “tectonic window” of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge.

“On Earth, mantle rock is normally extremely difficult to access,” JOIDES Resolution states on its website. “The Atlantis Massif offers a rare advantage to gain access to it, as it is comprised of mantle rocks that have been brought up closer to the surface through the process of ultra-slow seafloor spreading.”

Researchers aboard the JOIDES Resolution saw the rock cores in half, creating a resource for future study.
The large cliffs along the southern side of Atlantis Massif, also known as The Lost City, from the JOIDES Resolution expedition in 2000. These white chimneys are a unique geologic feature in the Atlantis Massif, indicating that a rare phenomenon called serpentinization — when warm water interacts with minerals in the rocks, producing hydrocarbons that are essential precursors for life — is occurring.

The research team, part of the International Ocean Discovery Program, originally set out to drill for clues to the origin of life – because the area’s richness in hydrogen and organic material may have fueled the beginnings of life.

Although scientists did not drill into the mantle – or set a record for deepest hole ever drilled beneath the seafloor – they did recover the deepest mantle rock ever, getting samples from as deep as 4,157 feet. 

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