IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.

Ocean drill reaches unprecedented depth

LiveScience: Scientists have drilled nearly a mile into the planet's ocean crust, retrieving samples from the pristine layer of igneous rock for the first time.
The center of the crust-drilliing operation is a derrick set up onboard the research vessel JOIDES Resolution in the Pacific Ocean.
The center of the crust-drilliing operation is a derrick set up onboard the research vessel JOIDES Resolution in the Pacific Ocean.IODP / TAMU
/ Source: LiveScience

It's not quite the center of the earth, but scientists have drilled nearly a mile into the planet's ocean crust, retrieving samples from the pristine layer of igneous rock for the first time.

Scientists onboard the drilling ship JOIDES Resolution in the Pacific Ocean, about 500 miles (800 kilometers) west of Costa Rica, bored into the planet's crust and recovered black rocks called gabbro from intact crust.

Gabbro is a dense type of rock formed from the slow cooling of magma chambers beneath midocean ridges. Along with gabbro, the team hauled up a complete stratified core of the overlaying crust.

By studying the gabbro along with the crust section, scientists will better understand the formation and structure of oceanic crust, a process that affects plate tectonics, builds mountains and sets off earthquakes and volcanoes.

New (top) and badly damaged (bottom) rock-coring drill bits used to penetrate to the oceanic gabbro layer at Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Site 1256. Bit diameter 25 cm.
New (top) and badly damaged (bottom) rock-coring drill bits used to penetrate to the oceanic gabbro layer at Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Site 1256. Bit diameter 25 cm.

"This process covers 60 percent of the earth's surface, and it's an ongoing process that has replaced all of the sea floor since 180 million years ago," study co-author Douglas Wilson of the University of California at Santa Barbara told LiveScience.

"In terms of understanding the planet, it's a fundamental process," he said.

Studying oceanic crust and the layers below will also help scientists learn how deep-sea volcanoes and other hot vents alter the chemistry of ocean water.

The study is detailed Thursday in the online edition of the journal Science.