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Origins Of Earth

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Nice to see Japan doing some real scientific research as opposed to their whale killing enterprise .... oops, research. :o I look forward to the results of this mission.

Drilling for answers to Earth's origin

Leo Lewis

January 17, 2006

THE world's most technologically advanced exploration ship sailed yesterday on a mission that may reveal the origin of life on Earth.

The Japanese ship Chikyu is intending to drill 7km below the seabed - more than three times deeper than has ever been done before. It will then raise to the surface a cylinder 1.5m long and 15cm wide which could contain science's first glimpse of a "living" sample of the earth's mantle.

"The 20th century was all about the origin of matter and the universe, so it seemed useful to go to space and the moon," the project's director-general, Asahiko Taira, said.

"There were extraordinary advances and we learnt about atoms and the Big Bang. The 21st century is about the fundamental question of where life comes from."

The ship will also be conducting research into the origin of earthquakes. By sinking sensors below the earth's crust, scientists aboard the Chikyu want to provide Japan and East Asia with the first effective earthquake prediction system.

The theory behind the life-sciences side of the research is that life may have originated below the earth's crust at temperatures and pressures unknown on land or sea. The energy that provoked the first semblance of life may also have been geothermal rather than solar.

Samples of mantle that have been pushed to the earth's surface over thousands of years have been studied by scientists but nobody has ever seen a "living" slice or had the opportunity to see whatever micro-organisms may be living there.

"This planet is home and we know so little about what is going on just a relatively little distance below our feet. If the secret of life exists to be seen, it is in the deep somewhere," Dr Taira said.

After completing the training missions that began yesterday, the ship, which cost around $822million to build and will cost another $117million for every year it is drilling, will head to the Nankai Trough, 200km off the coast of Nagoya, where the seabed is 2.5km below the surface.

The mission of discovery is not restricted to biology. Physical samples of the mantle are also expected to deliver a rich trove of seismological, volcanic, geological, environmental and climatological information. The reason the Japanese project offers the prospect of such important scientific discoveries is not depth alone.

The now abandoned Russian Kola Well bored nearly 12km into the earth, but contributed virtually nothing to science because its entire depth was all in the earth's crust.

The Japanese project will be the first to reach the entirely unsurveyed environment of the mantle - the next layer of depth within the earth - and will do so by exploiting the fact that the Japanese archipelago lies near a site where major tectonic plates overlap, making it an area where the earth's crust is thinner.

By boring beneath the seabed, the scientists will take advantage of the fact that the Mohorovicic Discontinuity (the point where the crust officially becomes the mantle) is nearer than it is on land.

Although the international project has the financial and scientific involvement of the US, South Korea, several European countries and China, it is led by the Japan Agency for Marine Earth Science and Technology and is heavily funded by the Japanese taxpayer.

The cost can be justified because of what the Chikyu may find about the origins of earthquakes.

By drilling to record-breaking depths below areas where tectonic plates overlap, the ship may have its sensors in place as an earthquake begins and significantly advance the science of seismology.

Other areas of research include using deep rock samples to construct a better picture of the earth's environmental history, particularly in the areas under ice caps, which may offer clues to the baffling question of why the polarity of the planet's magnetic field has repeatedly switched.

The project's chief engineer, Kiyotaka Yamamoto, said: "We will be drilling at possible temperatures of 200C, pressures at which we make industrial diamonds and through rock that even the oil industry has never scratched. Of course there will be failures before we get down there, but this is Japan's Apollo mission."

The Times

The Japanese do love their baseball. 7 kms of boring, just to get a piece of Mantle, also known as a mantlepiece.

post-3636-1137469314_thumb.jpg

The original mantle boring project was a victim of LBJ's corruption. :o

Global Marine was a San Diego based company with lots of experience drilling in

deep ocean locations. The project was called "Operation Mo-hole" and was to drill through the Mohorovic Discontinuity Layer, the thinnest part of the crust which is found in very deep water. The Johnson Administration diverted the project to Brown and Root (The Halliburton of its day as it built all the bases in Vietnam), a big contributor to Texan Johnson. The money was all spent but no hole was ever completed. :D

Here is the NAS history

Boring holes.

You are unusually verbose today, Meadish... :o

One of my personal favorite research projects by Tokyo University several years ago was to implant tiny cameras on cockroaches. Apparently, they were interested in testing the merit of roaches as potential spies or secret agents, since they can crawl, burrow and hide undetected :o

I kid you not.

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