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  • 2021-02-21 (xsd:date)
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  • Was The 'Deepest Hole on Earth' Sealed After Finding '2 Billion Year Old Fossil'? (en)
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  • If, in the course of your online browsing, you were to run into an ad with impressive pictures of massive mines and cool looking fossils that advertises an article titled Deepest Hole on Earth Permanently Sealed After Finding 2 Billion Year Old Fossil, you might think that this item represents a recent event, that it involves impressive looking open-pit mines, and that cool pictures of fossils are the result of the dig. You could be forgiven, as well, if you assumed that there was some sort of link between the fossils and the sealing of this hole. None of those assumptions would be true. The article the ad advertises is about a Soviet engineering project, the Kola Superdeep Borehole, that occurred from the late 1960s to the early 1990s. That article is found on a website named Explored Planet. The advertisement itself makes use of several photos unrelated to that topic: In the above ad, the image on the left is the Mir Mine in Russia. At 1,722 feet deep, it is far from the deepest hole on Earth. The fossil pictured in the top right of the ad is an organism known as a crinoid, which could never have been found in the Kola Borehole because that hole was driven through rocks that formed over a billion years before crinoids even evolved. The image on the bottom right, however, is related: It is the actual sealed-off top of the Kola Borehole. While the Cold War saw a much more famous technological race to the moon, there was also a Cold War era competition to see who could drill deep enough to approach the mantle. During the Cold War, BBC Future reported in 2019, there was a race by the superpowers to drill as deep as possible into the Earth’s crust – and even to reach the mantle of the planet itself. As described by the Smithsonian, The Kola Superdeep Borehole was just 9 inches in diameter, but at 40,230 feet reigns as the deepest hole. As reported in a 1984 Scientific American feature, the rocks through which the borehole passes encompass 1.4 billion years of earth history: Some of those sedimentary and volcanic rocks contain evidence of plankton fossils, as mentioned in the Explored Planet article's point about 2-billion-year-old microscopic plankton fossils. However, these fossils and/or their discovery had nothing to do with the end of the Kora Borehole project. Extreme heat forced an end to drilling, as explained in Smithsonian Magazine: Because the ad, and the meandering clickbait it links to, discuss a factual scientific project, but because they mislead readers with unrelated photos and confusing headlines, we rank its claims a Mixture. (en)
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