Earth’s elusive mantle is too much to resist for a team of
Japanese scientists who plan to be the first to reach it. The team will
use a giant drill to reach the molten rock, located six kilometers (3.7
miles) beneath the planet’s surface.
"If we dig into the mantle we will know the whole Earth history, that's our motivation to search," researcher Natsue Abe, who is involved in the project, told CNN.Japan's Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC) are undertaking the massive project that will see a drill dropped four kilometers into the ocean, before drilling through six kilometers of the planet’s crust to reach its destination.
"We don't know the exact (composition) of the mantle yet. We have only seen some mantle materials -- the rock is very beautiful, it's kind of a yellowish green," Abe said.
#Jamstec plan to drill 6km into earth's crust in attempt to become first to reach the mantle, source Jamstec pic.twitter.com/0SBv5y12Tt— Colm McGlinchey (@ColmMcGlinchey) April 8, 2017
The mantle has been observed before by scientists, extruding from ocean ridges and in areas of the ocean where crust is missing, but JAMSTEC’s research will be the first time it has been viewed directly at such a depth.JOURNEY TO THE CENTER OF THE EARTH: Japanese scientists want to be first to drill into the Earth's mantle https://t.co/DqdrHvt6pR— David (@intenseCA) April 8, 2017
Three locations in the Pacific Ocean are being scouted for the expedition, planned to start before 2030. A location in Hawaii will be used for preliminary research in September, which will use sound waves to study the thickness and temperature of the crust, reported The Yomiuri Shimbun.
When the drilling begins JAMSTEC will enlist the help of the Chikyū, a Japanese scientific drilling ship designed to drill deeper into the Earth than any ship before it.
There are four objectives to the project, according to Abe, the first of which is to access the mantle.
"The second aim is we want to investigate the boundary between the oceanic crust and the mantle," she said. "The third one is we want to know how the oceanic crust formed."
The fourth objective is to examine how life exists inside the planet and see if it has any limitations.
A Journey to the Unrest Beneath… The Earth’s Mantle - a blog by Elodie Kendall https://t.co/A9WtENJRqc pic.twitter.com/khXbPVhV53
— London NERC DTP (@London_NERC_DTP) June 27, 2016
Earth’s Mantle May Be Hotter Than Thoughthttps://t.co/bar3TU9R3a pic.twitter.com/T0kBjJ4mcL— Kataeb.org English (@Kataeb_Eng) March 13, 2017
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