I’ve worked in the oilpatch in Western Alberta for 25 years and have a bit of an infatuation with Deep Wells and the challenges associated with them. I’ve been aware of both the Kola & Bertha Rogers wells for 20 odd years now and despite much research, this vid has the best & most images of the Kola drilling operation. I had never heard of the Swedish well so thanks for the tip. The temperatures we were encountering around here at 3000-3800 meters were in the 100-130 degrees Celsius range.
The deepest well I recall working on here was ~ 4300 meters. We have much deeper than that - ~ 6500 meters true vertical depth range, but I never got the honour (headache) of working on those.
We have wells around here with ~ 10,000 meters total depth as they say, but those are modern wells with say 3-4 kms true vertical depth and the rest what we call Build, which is the horizontal leg through the pay zone.
While very impressive (how do they slide 7 kms of pipe?!?), those aren’t True Vertical Wells, and why they aren’t as impressive as TVD Deep Wells is that the deeper you drill, the slower and harder it gets, higher pressures, higher temperatures and harder rock all contributing to this.
@The Notch Neat, I've never heard of Alliance (no surprise, this is a big province and while I've been all over, I haven't been everywhere lol). Ill look that up.
@god it's a European thing and as a born European living in the west, it doesn't make sense to me either. You would think it would be obvious to use comma as a pause or a separator, like we use here in this sentence, and a decimal point for decimals.
it’s obvious the narrator is reading from a script with no understanding of the context or that europeans use a decimal point instead of a comma for a thousands separator. Just poor video directing to be honest
@god I understand what you are saying regarding the metric system and yes kilo = 1000. But see how even you got confused when you said “Wtf? He is correct. 12.57 km means 12,570 meters. You owe him an apology.” Yes you are correct 12.57km IS 12,570m, but the video implies 12.574km is 12574 km (in Europe) not meters. Anyway the guy throughout the entire video narrates it using the decimal point as apparently you and I would see it, yet at the beginning he tells us that the earth has a diameter of “twelve point seven five four” kilometers (in European)… hence the confusion , he should have just said the entire number as 12750 km What I am trying to say is I think you gave that guy, or girl Viki, shit for nothing : )
As an exploration driller who regularly drills to about 1km deep I’ve always been fascinated about drilling much deeper. It is already a difficult job drilling beyond a K and I have no idea how the drillers were able to go so deep and keep the equipment working.
Since they are drilling straight down I'm guessing the main hurdle is losing torque over distance, so you would need additional mud motors placed in the string and the main problem with that is the temperature at that depth destroying the motor rubber and seals in whatever logging tools they are running in the string.
i live near the appalachian mountains at an elevation near 300 meters. i had a surprise when we drilled a deep well and at a depth of 80 meters what was dredged up was sea shells.
They have found full whale skeletons on mountain tops in Perú. Evolutionists say it’s from plate tectonics. If you believe in the Bible and a global flood, that makes more sense to me.
At least it wasn't a flash frozen mammoth chewing strawberry with an erect penis. Something, something every 12000 years the earth does some crazy shit really fast.
My favorite parts of the video are where they explain exactly what the earth's makeup is and then say everything we thought was true about the earth's interior isn't.
The truth is no one had any idea about the earth, space, or even the human body to a large extent. However they speak about it as if they have all the wonders of the world figured out.......
I think that from a certain point on, temperature becomes a problem. And also the so-called lithoplastic deformation events set in. Further down you need temperatureproof drilling heads, eventually need of coolant. Water starts evaporating at 100°C, so thereafter something else would be required. But finally and even all this will reach a point from where everything won't remain solid, also the well diameter, equal what expensive superhard drillhead material you have in operation and undergoes permanent deformation, thermal thread, from where a "mechanical drilling" no longer can be done properly or even work because you are literally kneading your drillhead forward into lithoplastic mineralic masses, merely sooner or later transitioning into a consistence of lava.
@@lukaskuhl902 Most of civilized world uses comma as a decimal separator. Here is an example so your american brains can have a chance of comprehending it: 1 : 2 = 0,5
@@thehuntermikipl1170 I think what they're getting at is that the narrator actually *says* "the diameter is twelve point seven kilometres" .... even worse, he says "the equatorial diameter is twelve point seven five four kilometres, which is forty kilometres larger than the polar diameter which is twelve point seven one one kilometres" ... it's as if he has no idea what the words he's saying mean, or any comprehension of numbers ... it's comical.
@@nickboyce251 Holy shit, that's right, I missed that. And when I saw Chris' comment I didn't rewatch the beginning, I just looked at the numbers with video paused, and assumed it was about decimal separator. Nevermind then, and sorry to Chris and Lukas.
Scientists have used seismic wave analysis to determine what layers are there and how deep they are. This type of science was done a long time ago and isn't that difficult.
How do they know how thick these layers are if no one has drilled down that far? The video mentioned they they knew the depth of the mantle but what do they use to measure that? Some kind of sonar?
They’ve taken many measurements of earthquakes. Knowing the speed of sound through different mediums, they were able to determine, through triangulation, what mediums exists in the earth, at what depths and what they’re made of. Scientists also know that the center is very hot. So through a variety of sciences, they’ve learned a lot about what’s in the cores of our earth.
The same way they "know" that the Earth is billions of years old. They don't, they just make guesses and assume they're correct. That is pretty evident when the rock layers were not turning out as they expected. If there's one thing we should have learned from recent events, it's that there are plenty of things that can be presented as scientific fact whether they are true or not.
@@darkprinc979 You have issues with authority. That’s what your reply says to most people. I understand. If you have no means to understand or grasp the science of a subject then you might doubt the results. Again it’s understandable. However, instead of giving an alternate opinion, most likely an uneducated opinion, why don’t you just say, “I have no idea, I’m not versed in that subject.” Or don’t reply at all. Or, possibly admit that you have issues with authority and that your opinion is biased. That’s the honest approach. That’s what a scientist would do. Don’t you agree?
The one and only thing, though they didn't actual see it. Was the fact that at the distance they bored down to was limited by the constant melting of the drill bit. They utilzied various materal's and regardlessly, none of them were able to cause the bore hole to go any deeper, when they basically just melted.
On Coast to Coast After Dark with Art Bell back in the '90s, they said they heard terrible screams from many voices way down deep. They figured that they must be hearing screams coming out of hell. I still have the CD. Also the CD about Mel's Hole.
The screams could be coming from the living, not the dead. All the missing people that have disappeared/abducted and held captive and being tortured by inner-earth reptilians/E.T.s in underground places.
I dug a hole in my garden. Obviously not as deep as this but it was quite deep. All I found was mud and some stones. I thought they were diamonds but it was gravel.
i once dug a pretty deep hole in my garden and planted a coin, so that when people in the future dig it out will be confused how is a coin made in 2000's at such depth
LOL... Not a good start at 0:15. The diameter of the earth is not 12.754km (that's a 3 hour walk at a brisk pace). The diameter is 12,754 as in twelve thousand, not twelve point something.
The AI voicebox wouldn't know the difference: the narration appears to be generated, but the facts and numbers were presented in non-U.S. number formatting, with a dot as a thousands separator, while the LLM-based machine learning thingy defaulted to parsing 12.754 (and maybe others) as an Imperial measurement.
Most 'dead planets' are not actually nearly as dead as people often give them credit for. As an example, Mars is not a geologically dead planet, neither is Venus.
When I was a kid we were digging a "foxhole" in my backyard playing Army and hit this weird black seam of what appeared to be coal in red clay. I dug up this weird bronze or brass colored bell with a nude lady on it wearing a weird cone shaped hat with flaps or horns hanging down on the sides and a cape or bat wings. It was half encrusted in the coal and I chipped it off. It had weird symbols on it that looked like what I now realize must have been futhark runes or some kind of pre-sanskrit. It was handmade and had no cast lines or maker's marks on it but you could faintly see where it had been hammered. It had no connection point inside for a tongue or anything. However, if struck with a stone it would put out this unusual tone that would last about 20 seconds that you could feel in the center of your brain like a tickle. I thought this odd because the tone seemed to last much longer than it should have but it was so satisfying and..enticing. Over the course of just a few minutes I sorta became addicted to that tone and wanted more. I kept dinging it and before I knew it the sky was getting dark and I looked over at the kids that were with me and they were frozen like in a trance. Time had gotten away from us. I wanted to take it to school for show and tell but my mom confiscated it due to the naked voluptuous woman and told me she would put it away for when I was an adult. A couple of nights after that I had a bizarre dream where a scantily clad and gorgeous woman with bat wings came to my window sort of humming or singing a sort of lullaby and I went to the window and let her in. She whispered something in my ear in a language I couldn't understand but somehow I knew she wanted me to lie back down in bed. I couldnt renember what happened after that. The next morning my Mom woke me up and asked me why there where flower petals on my pillow. I had no clue. There was dried blood on my lips but I had no wounds anywhere. When I was 18 I asked for the bell back and she said she couldn't find it. Later my Grandmother told me that my Mom admitted to selling it at a garage sale along with a set of corelle dishes I won in a drawing when I was 9. I remember grammy saying it was for the best as the bell belonged to "the devil's bride". Somewhere out there is an extremely important artifact found in Bossier City, LA in 1979 and some mook in the Shreveport Bossier area has it on their curio shelf. Way to go Mom. I could have rewritten history if you hadn't robbed your own son to get money to buy more giant spray cans of Aqua-Net hairspray, tupperware, and Benson&Hedges cigarettes.
Thanks for sharing that very interesting experience. Have you come up with any ideas on what the artifact may hve been? What part of the world? Maybe a civilization?
Great story. Whether it was real or not, I enjoyed it. Makes my story about my teddy bear being thrown away look even more pathetic than it already was, lol.
As deep as that is that didn't even get but somewhere between a quarter of the way and half the way to the mantle. We haven't even cracked the crust yet that's crazy
@@unchargedpickles6372 we should when we know more about space than we know about our own planet I mean do it in a controlled manner which is quite easy to accomplish
I visited this Deep Hole on the Kola Peninsula in 1995, when drilling was 'temporarily' suspended to exactly this depth. My attention was then caught by a bulging zinc bucket, which was on top of the hole, apparently to prevent the tools from falling into the hole. Out of curiosity, I removed the bucket and listened, if perhaps I could hear the speeches of the 15th Party Congress of China...
The well would have been filled with (liquid) "mud", to a level about 3 to 5 m below the drill floor you were walking on. Anything you heard would have been roughnecks doing work in the "cellar deck, echoing up through the "bell nipple".
There are several interesting stories that happened in my country about the wells. In the city of Constantine, where I live in (Algeria, North Africa), where a farmer dug an artesian well on his land, and after 80 meters of drilling, they found carbon materials in a huge amount, and he contacted committees at the Ministry of Energy, and after taking samples of the existing materials, a report came that it was just old car oil, and the well was sunk and banned The place to enter and wells were dug in that area and everything is videos on RUclips you can search on it and there is also a similar story in a city not far from the scene of the first accident about a farmer who dug a well and at a depth of 100 meters the well exploded with hot water and natural gas
The explanation that it was 'old car oil' just doesn't make sense if they are suggesting that it leaked from above. More likely that it was a naturally occurring oil substance that someone didn't want known. Oil being far more abundant or even naturally forming would be inconvenient to oil companies that gain financially from oil being scarce.
@@BlueSpaceLizard you never know what might have been over that lad in the past. down on ol tank farm road where i used to live, the say a whole pool of oil and chemicals sank down into the earth until they hit bedrock and couldnt sink any deeper. all from the old oil facilities that used to be there almost a hundred years ago now. er got the eternal flames brurning up top now and while the earth grows green and looks good, you certainly wouldnt want to drill a water well there. they just put an airport over half or it and problem solved. what ever dudes real story was.. its not some conspiracy from big oil not wanting you know know about it. ill gurantee you that much. thats the stupidest shit ive ever heard. havent you ever seen there will be blood? if theres profit there, theyll drink your milkshake.
@@BlueSpaceLizard I have read many theories claiming that oil is located in specific places and that it exists naturally, like other natural resources that are in the earth and are inexhaustible, and we have been hearing since the eighties until now in the media that oil will end up inside. 10 or 15 years before the existence of the Internet, I do not know the reality of these theories, I am not a biological expert, but I assure you that I saw oil wells explode like water wells in the desert in my country 70 years ago until now. We also live on top of the largest underground water reservoir on Earth, and the government won't let you extract a gallon of it. From the water without his permission, the drilling license takes several years to accept the drilling of a well for our land, and we hear the same scarecrow that the water will run out and the wells will dry up
When you say that we tried to get to the mantle in the early 60's but it unfortunately had no results, what do you mean by "no results"? Did they fail to go deep enough? Did it end up being more than 5 miles deep so they couldn't reach it?
Difficulty increases exponentially with depth. For example, you either need to dig a hole big enough for the whole machine to lower itself Into, and repeat the process again and again to make progress... Which is not feasible, especially in the ocean. OR. Like a commercial oil rig, the machine stays on the surface, and the drill is more or less a series of links that can be added to from the top. Drill 10 feet, stop, raise the motor, add a 10ft section of drill, continue drilling, repeat for about 5 miles. So, one bad locking lug in that chain, and the whole thing fails. Not to mention, the parts at the bottom (actual drill head) will need to be replaced or serviced at some point. So now you have to raise the chain of drill links and take every single one out, store them somewhere, replace the drill head, then lower them all back down in a controlled manner (can't just drop them), again one at a time. The weight of every single piece has to be suspended at once by the machine if there's no earth to support it. Being in the ocean kinda helps this one. A, things fall slower in water and B, the weight of water they displace will offset the weight of the steel a bit. Still fucking heavy. Repeating this for FIVE MILES is ridiculous. If something breaks and gets stuck, the hole is shot. You can't drill through the old drill. And because it's not actually a straight line, you can't really move the machine 10 ft and try again or you may still hit the old bore hole and damage the new drill. So your moving it a reasonable distance. Again, easier on the ocean. But still sucks. So yeah I don't doubt they just had a parts failure fairly deep into the drilling and called it quits instead of trying again. Or had several failed attempts.
@@OpTicBossaru I don't know why you wrote such a long comment. This had absolutely nothing to do with what my question was. When I ask "what do you mean by "no results" you don't have to go into an essay on how drilling works. That's absurd.
@@OpTicBossaru "You can't drill through the old drill." Actually, you can. The problem is that generally the rock walls are softer than your "milling head", or the broken drill bit (or other tool), so you tend to push the loose part into a pocket you gouge in the side of the borehole, where it lodges until you've drilled (strictly, "milled") far enough ahead in rock that there is space for the broken part to fall into the well behind your milling tools. Then you've got a different jamming mechanism. Typically, it is safer to pump cement into the bottom of the hole with the debris, let it set solid (holding all the debris in place), then drill back onto that cement plug and let it kick you off in a new direction. After that, you steer the well back onto the original course. There are far fewer unknowns, and while you're committed to (say) 3 days of cementing and re-drilling operations (when a milling operation may only take a day and a half), your maximum time might only be 6 days (doing the job twice) instead of 15 days (for multiple failed milling operations). Which is professional drilling risk management. Not flailing around desperately, because you've never faced this problem before. Happens every one in 30 to 50 wells. With a 150+ well CV, I've seen about a half dozen such operations.
When I was a kid ,my dad was running a backhoe in Tujunga ca mountains and we dug up sea shells..crazy to realize how high the oceans were at one time.
Around the time when the drilling took place there was this swedish oil guy who claimed that formafion of oil was due to mineral origins under great preasure at great depth.
@@vinylexperience77 L,M,F,A,O....Could this be coordinates for a new drill site at Oak island? Just have to use numerology and the team will definatly uncover somthing after this next comercial break....for sure this time...really just one more commercial break for three other Discovery channel shows and a Cialis ad and youre Gold...well not real gold in a pit or anything but you'll be good, it'll be cool I promise.
Wow! I didn't know the equator was only 12.7 Kilometers in diameter! That's a whole 7.9 miles! I would have guessed it to be just a few more miles longer than that. At least 10 miles or so.
I came immediately to the comments section to find this exact one. It's wild for them to get that part wrong in what otherwise seems like a high production video. Proof reading skipped haha
All they found was that drill heads can't drill through hard magma. And that has been known for many years. As soon as the pressure gets too high, rock starts to flow. And that binds the drill head and makes it impossible to drill.
they did find something weird stuff that is used these days on cars today. it makes layer on all metal metal - to - metal surfaces and it reduces friction, heat and emissions and also makes engine power back to original or even a bit more. also it does not pour out of engine when you change the oil, it sticks on the friction surfaces and with normal driving style, it lasts for 100 000km without the engine getting worn at all! that is called RVS-technology, from finland! :) i suggest to try it!
Trust me, it's not impossible. But you'd have to have something like a drill bit of pure diamond, and also I believe drilling into magma that's creating a floating shield that deep. The earth will take a nice burp.
@@benjamincoffman261 They were using drill bits of diamond. necessary when drilling through basalt. But the earth would not "take a nice burp", the magma would just flow into the drill bit and clog it. which is what was happening.
@@jessepollard7132 I never think you'd be able to go through the magma regardless. I just meant you could reach that area. It's magma. Nothing exist down there thats solid from what we know till you hit the core.
@@benjamincoffman261 Can't even get that far as the rock gets soft due to the pressure. it flows and crushes the shaft - making it impossible to drill.
Sorry if I'm confused, just trying to get my head around this...how do they know regarding the core and layers etc back up to the surface if we can only drill 9 odd km's down? This is what I'm trying to understand, man or instruments have not got passed the mantle?
They're wild guessing with all the confidence of a flim flam man. That's what most of science is: wild ass guesses presented as fact. That way they get to demand "carbon taxes" for your contribution to imaginary emergencies.
"That's not an 8 year olds question...that's my question...cuz if we didn't go there....and that's the way it happened. And, if we didn't go there, then we need to figure out why so we can go back in the future...." Paraphrasing an astroNOT. If ya know, ya know.
They study earthquake waves traveling through the earth. Different density materials bend the waves differently. With enough waves you can draw a pretty accurate view of the structure of the earth. The density gives them a good idea of the composition.
After misbehaving as a teen I was sent to my uncles, an ex army sarge. He asked me to dig a hole in his backyard leaving me for work. He never returned for 11 days having endured serious work injury. When he came back he saw a 15 foot hole and a malnourished nephew
@@imagseer "Whoever fights monsters should see to it that in the process he does not become a monster. And if you gaze long enough into an abyss, the abyss will gaze back into you."- Frederich Nietzsche
I think the script was written by someone from a country that uses the period as the thousands separator rather than a comma. Then the person reading the script read it as "12 point 754" rather than "12 thousand 754".
@@kateapple1 I'll tell you what he meant. He said "I worked on a well in Oklahoma and flowed it back for 3 weeks. It only made salt water. Supposed to be an oil well."
@@VikingKong. 🤦♂️They drilled a well in Oklahoma, when they started to extract it was nothing but salt water, they was drilling for oil, Oklahoma is land locked.
😆. As soon as I heard him say the ISS is in "deep space" I heard enough. If there was a road going to it you could drive there in a few hours and that's nowhere near deep space 😂.
If anyone cares, a little note on the pronunciation of "chikyuu", the Japanese word for the planet earth (地球, basically meaning ground sphere): The accentuation is not put on the first syllable (ち, chi), but rather on the _second syllable_ (きゅう, kyuu). Additionally, the "i" in "chi" should be more silent, more as part of the "ch"-sound itself. So, what you basically end up with is something like: "ch-KYUU", if that makes any sense.
Learning Japanese is on my "To DO" list (I've been a G̅o player for decades, when I can find a partner) as soon as I finish one of my other courses - German, Portuguese, or Kiswahili, - whichever comes first.
Yeah, well if you'd watched The Core, you'd know that humanity has drilled down to the Earth's core and restarted its rotation with nuclear bombs. That documentary was wild!
VERY interesting. I've never been involved in deep well drilling, but it seems logical that the weight of the drilling rig at extreme depths would inevitably result in failure. Drilling straight down seems to be a flawed strategy, so why not drill at a 45 degree angle and only have the drill head turn?
@@lagunafishing The rig was supported by the ground it was on anyway. it takes pressure to cause the bit to bite into rock. at 45% that would be less than half the available pressure as the rest is going sideways. IT also doesn't prevent the rock flowing due to the pressure at 1+km depth.
You add ½ of the actual length to attain the same depth. Plus any plate shift will close it up. I guarantee they chose the spot because of plate stability.
@@benjamincoffman261 Choosing suitable ground locations least prone to collapse is vital. To mitigate potential collapse further, the simple remedy being to incorporate rigging inside sacrificial/permanent sleeve pipes so the drill head and excavations can be safely removed - again at a 45 degree bore angle on which the excavator assembly head would rest. *Horizontal boring apparatus can be used to place pipe sections into position as it progresses.
@@mikesalive That's why they calculated at a speed of 25 kph they could pass thru both belts safety. This limited their ships exposure to the radiation to more than survivable levels. Testing revealed @.018 rad or less which is way below acceptable levels. If someone believes NASA moon landings are fake then anything can be.
It was a joke. The narrator claimed the earths diameter was “12.754 kilometers “ at 0:15 of the video. When in actuality it it twelve thousand seven hundred and fifty-four miles in diameter. Wake up.
Oops!! - at beginning of video the screen and narrtor refer to the diameter of the earth at the equator as being 12.754 kilometers ("12 point 754 kms") - perhaps you mean 12,754 kms (12 thousand 754 kms)!! ;)
Very well done my friend! Thanks for this educational video. If only people would take a break from watching mindless Tik Tok videos this video would have millions of views.
At 17 seconds into the video, we are told (verbaly) that Earth's diameter at the equator is "twelve point seven five four" kilometers, not the true value of twelve thousand seven-hundred fifty-four kilometers. The problem, I think, is that the computer voice read the 'dot' as a decimal point (American usage) and not as a separator between the thousands and the hundreds place (European).
Quite obvious, don't you think? Maybe you could also tell us the title of the video and that it's on RUclips. (The dot is not "European". France, Germany, Austria, Belgium, Italy, Switzerland, etc. all use the comma.)
@@drMaglov I don't care if it's radius. 12 *POINT* 75 kilometers the size of something like a small town. It's a brisk morning hike. It's 7 minutes at highway speeds. The diameter of the earth at the equator is 12 *THOUSAND* 750 (if you're rounding) kilometers.
@@drMaglov He says it very clearly: 12.750 *kilometers* which is 12 750 *METERS*. The real number is 12.75 *thousand kilometers*, Or "Megameters". Which is 12 750 000 meters. That's a HUGE difference.
@@Syrnian commas and periods have a specific place in mathematics. That aside, even in the video it was pronounced as 12.754 km. Not the right use of punctuation and neither the right use of pronunciation.
@@srinu20040303 The US and England are outside the norm using periods and commas in numbers. Most of the rest of the world uses a commas were we use periods and periods were we use commas.
Soviets on weed "Comrade...comrade...broski....let's... let's.......like drill a well and just like keep going. Like I mean no stopping...just keep going! Like forever.... Blyat you got any snacks?"
@@KF1 hope so. Also, they shouldn't do it until the 2020s are over if they want it to cool and not make a volcano, the 2020s are too sketchy to try new things like that lol
As a representative of the reptilian underground overlords I promise it is just rock and such and i wouldn't waste my time and resources worrying about it.
Aside from the astronomical cost of moving material, would a cone shaped hole be far more feasible engineering wise? Basically, imagine an upside down pyramid (cone). When you want to go deeper, you simultaneously widen the hole while going deeper.
That would be an open pit mine. The largest, Bingham Canyon Mine in UT, which has been in production since 1906, is 1.2 km deep and 4 km wide. That gives us W=3.33D, so at the 30km thinnest part of the crust, you'd need a cone shaped hole 100km wide to reach the mantle, which requires removing 236 trillion cubic meters of earth.
No, and the drill head is kind of like that anyway. Usually three teeth head. That grind it up, with a pump behind it to get out debris that doesn't smooth against the walls.
This video reminds me of when you have to write a paper a certain length and you just fill it with nonsense that's not fact. Like when they said how the world became humbled at how little they know.. just filler BS.
Speaking as one of the several hundred thousand people who drill wells for a living, the layering is as plain as the change in colour of the shale shakers when you drill into a new layer and circulate the samples up.
If humans have dug only 12.262km then how do you know the crust is 35-45km thick on average? Our lack of knowledge about the earths crust today is comparable to the lack of knowledge about the deep ocean life prior to 1872. Until we dig that far or develop a mechanism to see through the mantil, we will never really be sure.
It’s actually because of earthquakes. When triangulating them we have a known time and distance between 3+ points. We also know that earthquakes make s and p waves of which only p waves travel through liquid. Comparing the differences in both waves on different sides of the planet lets us determine the depth of the crust and that our planet has at least partially liquid internals.
We know how deep the crust is by observing S waves and P waves from Earthquakes. S waves for example do not pass through a liquid so they stop at a depth of about 2,800 km. This must mean there is a liquid in the interior of the planet.
Hi. Do you think there's anything interesting out there?
Yes and I love your Channel. Please keep the content going.
Now that I know the diameter is 12km , my attempt at roller skating around the world is back on.
Hey! Nope just more star stuff arranged in a different way. In other words same ish different day. 😂
@@donniegoodman8679 yeah lets roll..
@@donniegoodman8679 under 40kms is doable 🤣
My ex-wife's dark, black heart is somewhere deep down there. Please return it to her if you come across it.
She sounds like she might be related to my Aunt Lisa
Haha. Her heart isn't there, but that hole is from where she and the other heartless wenches come.
Lol
It will turn into a diamond down there
My child mother selfish heart is down there also, if you find it let hers hitch a ride also.
I once dug a 6ft hole in my backyard, so I can understand these challenges.
Well that’s 3 6ft holes I know about now yours , our lasses and the one on brook side years ago ended up being a patio ? Ha ha
Was it to bury a body?
Oh yeah??? Well... I'm digging... a... 10 foot hole. So. There.
Yeeeeah.
@@TheyreBetterDry To bury a hobby
cant go further than 12 miles into earth yet gone to mars etc.........pull other one !
I’ve worked in the oilpatch in Western Alberta for 25 years and have a bit of an infatuation with Deep Wells and the challenges associated with them. I’ve been aware of both the Kola & Bertha Rogers wells for 20 odd years now and despite much research, this vid has the best & most images of the Kola drilling operation. I had never heard of the Swedish well so thanks for the tip. The temperatures we were encountering around here at 3000-3800 meters were in the 100-130 degrees Celsius range.
The deepest well I recall working on here was ~ 4300 meters. We have much deeper than that - ~ 6500 meters true vertical depth range, but I never got the honour (headache) of working on those.
We have wells around here with ~ 10,000 meters total depth as they say, but those are modern wells with say 3-4 kms true vertical depth and the rest what we call Build, which is the horizontal leg through the pay zone.
While very impressive (how do they slide 7 kms of pipe?!?), those aren’t True Vertical Wells, and why they aren’t as impressive as TVD Deep Wells is that the deeper you drill, the slower and harder it gets, higher pressures, higher temperatures and harder rock all contributing to this.
@The Notch Viking, Alberta? Nope, I live in West Central :)
@The Notch Neat, I've never heard of Alliance (no surprise, this is a big province and while I've been all over, I haven't been everywhere lol). Ill look that up.
I'll save you 20 minutes: Dirt, rock, some water, but mostly nothing
You sure man? I think it'll take me longer than 20 minutes to dig a 4 mile hole. 😉
And every other CH on YT lied about the 'Recordings' so one more reasons to tell Simon Whistler to F off and eat it. That chavy mouth piece.
now now no ignorance, THEY *know* there is a burning ball floating in its lava.
@@wildboar7473100 percent a burning ball somewhere in this floating rock lowkey definitely not where the tonails come from (there watching)
😁 Thank you , you ruined the whole video for me 😅
Exploring deep holes. Man's fascination since the beginning.
Every hole is a goal.
I like moist holes.
what kind of holes does man want to get into lol
@@jeanpaultongeren125 I have seen enough of the internet to know that the only answer is "all of them".
a dirty mind is a joy forever.
Everyone knows if you dig deep enough, you come out in China feet first.
This is true if the earth is not flat
What about if you start in China?
@@poolhalljunkie9 You end up in North Korea 😅
@ErgonBill You would have to start in South America.
@@runderdfrech3560 Only providing you dig straight, but that's not how the old wives tale goes.
12.75km? I think I’ll walk around the planet tomorrow.
Might want to check the decimal place there..
Yep its 12,754 km not 12.754 km 😂
Even I was confused initially what is he talking about
@god it's a European thing and as a born European living in the west, it doesn't make sense to me either. You would think it would be obvious to use comma as a pause or a separator, like we use here in this sentence, and a decimal point for decimals.
it’s obvious the narrator is reading from a script with no understanding of the context or that europeans use a decimal point instead of a comma for a thousands separator. Just poor video directing to be honest
@god I understand what you are saying regarding the metric system and yes kilo = 1000.
But see how even you got confused when you said “Wtf? He is correct. 12.57 km means 12,570 meters. You owe him an apology.” Yes you are correct 12.57km IS 12,570m, but the video implies 12.574km is 12574 km (in Europe) not meters.
Anyway the guy throughout the entire video narrates it using the decimal point as apparently you and I would see it, yet at the beginning he tells us that the earth has a diameter of “twelve point seven five four” kilometers (in European)… hence the confusion , he should have just said the entire number as 12750 km
What I am trying to say is I think you gave that guy, or girl Viki, shit for nothing : )
@god duh
Someday they'll discover a sleeping Balrog down there and we'll all quickly come to regret this.
He got cut loose 150 years ago.
@@candui-7go on..
Then all the elves are gonna nod to each other and say, “I knew that was going to happen. You fellows and your science! Pfft!”
Or something worse...
Nameless things...
Came for a wild Soviet story. Stayed for the fantastic nap that this video facilitated.
Just woke up from similar circumstances. Rewatching in hopes to stay awake this time 😂
Can confirm I feel more rested after napping through this video
i got so tired watching this
As an exploration driller who regularly drills to about 1km deep I’ve always been fascinated about drilling much deeper. It is already a difficult job drilling beyond a K and I have no idea how the drillers were able to go so deep and keep the equipment working.
I too am a exploration driller 😉
@@jamIam6548 plenty of strange holes out there to explore 😉
Since they are drilling straight down I'm guessing the main hurdle is losing torque over distance, so you would need additional mud motors placed in the string and the main problem with that is the temperature at that depth destroying the motor rubber and seals in whatever logging tools they are running in the string.
@@richardbaker_0086 😆😁
@@dessertstorm7476 main hurdle is heat and pressure go way up and the material becomes way to hard to cut
i live near the appalachian mountains at an elevation near 300 meters. i had a surprise when we drilled a deep well and at a depth of 80 meters what was dredged up was sea shells.
They have found full whale skeletons on mountain tops in Perú. Evolutionists say it’s from plate tectonics. If you believe in the Bible and a global flood, that makes more sense to me.
Correction: Diatom shells 🐚 aka diatomaceous earth is just crushed up fossilized sea shells.
Then you would be surprised to hear about the ocean sediments at the top of Everest?
At least it wasn't a flash frozen mammoth chewing strawberry with an erect penis. Something, something every 12000 years the earth does some crazy shit really fast.
I never met ANYONE from appalachian that uses metrics instead on American units of measurement.
I thought they were going to discover my secret man cave with 13 flat screens and a complete whiskey bar.
My favorite parts of the video are where they explain exactly what the earth's makeup is and then say everything we thought was true about the earth's interior isn't.
They do the same with everything else on this planet to.... Thats why you don't listen to the lies of your Government and poison yourself 💉 💀 💀
Yes especially at the start of the video telling us that the Earths diameter is only just over 12 kilometres!!!!!
@@almuric1baggins337 lol I think it’s an American narrator, probably doesn’t know what a kilometre is
The truth is no one had any idea about the earth, space, or even the human body to a large extent. However they speak about it as if they have all the wonders of the world figured out.......
The Earth is nothing but Dead Giants Body parts be in Animal or Human Go to Mud Fossil University to learn more. Ask Roger he knows All
I think that from a certain point on, temperature becomes a problem. And also the so-called lithoplastic deformation events set in. Further down you need temperatureproof drilling heads, eventually need of coolant. Water starts evaporating at 100°C, so thereafter something else would be required. But finally and even all this will reach a point from where everything won't remain solid, also the well diameter, equal what expensive superhard drillhead material you have in operation and undergoes permanent deformation, thermal thread, from where a "mechanical drilling" no longer can be done properly or even work because you are literally kneading your drillhead forward into lithoplastic mineralic masses, merely sooner or later transitioning into a consistence of lava.
I would have appreciated "for scale" a comparison to the deep (diamond?) mines in South Africa, which I understand can get rather warm.
water will not evaporate at the pressures down there
He'll is very hot!!!
Its not normal water they use in drilling. Much like machine coolant , it has a lubricant introduced thats water soluble.
And to think that all this time I could have taken a leisurely walk around the planet in just a couple of hours. WOW!
Yeah. I always thought the earth is massiv like thousends of Kilometers in size but aperently ist just 12.7 who would have thougth.
Like that Rick and Morty little planet xD
@@lukaskuhl902 Most of civilized world uses comma as a decimal separator. Here is an example so your american brains can have a chance of comprehending it:
1 : 2 = 0,5
@@thehuntermikipl1170 I think what they're getting at is that the narrator actually *says* "the diameter is twelve point seven kilometres" .... even worse, he says "the equatorial diameter is twelve point seven five four kilometres, which is forty kilometres larger than the polar diameter which is twelve point seven one one kilometres" ... it's as if he has no idea what the words he's saying mean, or any comprehension of numbers ... it's comical.
@@nickboyce251 Holy shit, that's right, I missed that. And when I saw Chris' comment I didn't rewatch the beginning, I just looked at the numbers with video paused, and assumed it was about decimal separator. Nevermind then, and sorry to Chris and Lukas.
I have a stupid question... if we haven't yet drilled down through all the supposed layers, how can we assume what is there?
Now u talkin !
Scientists have used seismic wave analysis to determine what layers are there and how deep they are. This type of science was done a long time ago and isn't that difficult.
@@davidmontierth8258damn what are you a scientist ?
its hollow!!!!!!!@@handlehandle998
Right
How do they know how thick these layers are if no one has drilled down that far? The video mentioned they they knew the depth of the mantle but what do they use to measure that? Some kind of sonar?
Sonar won't reach that far it's all lies guess work at best
They’ve taken many measurements of earthquakes. Knowing the speed of sound through different mediums, they were able to determine, through triangulation, what mediums exists in the earth, at what depths and what they’re made of. Scientists also know that the center is very hot. So through a variety of sciences, they’ve learned a lot about what’s in the cores of our earth.
The same way they "know" that the Earth is billions of years old. They don't, they just make guesses and assume they're correct. That is pretty evident when the rock layers were not turning out as they expected. If there's one thing we should have learned from recent events, it's that there are plenty of things that can be presented as scientific fact whether they are true or not.
@@darkprinc979 You have issues with authority. That’s what your reply says to most people. I understand. If you have no means to understand or grasp the science of a subject then you might doubt the results. Again it’s understandable. However, instead of giving an alternate opinion, most likely an uneducated opinion, why don’t you just say, “I have no idea, I’m not versed in that subject.” Or don’t reply at all. Or, possibly admit that you have issues with authority and that your opinion is biased. That’s the honest approach. That’s what a scientist would do. Don’t you agree?
@@SteveSteeleSoundSymphony I'm glad you represent "most people"
Thank you for this. Very interesting!
Greetings from Sweden.
Thank you so much for this upload!
I love this topic!
… but you are MAGA? aren’t you some kinda flat earther or something? you actually believe in real science!?
@@ericb2017 judging only on your comments you must be a AOC-leftie..
;)
God bless you and your loved ones!
Greetings from Ohio, USA Phil! Hope your day is blessed! ✌
@@JimKrause1975 Greetings!
All is well, having yet a blessed day.
God bless you and your loved ones, Sir.
👵🏿 who who who
They picked up on screams of demons being brutality murdered by the Doom guy.
The one and only thing, though they didn't actual see it. Was the fact that at the distance they bored down to was limited by the constant melting of the drill bit. They utilzied various materal's and regardlessly, none of them were able to cause the bore hole to go any deeper, when they basically just melted.
I was hoping for a monster, or at least some spooky sounds or some random artifact. Oh well, can't win 'em all. Good informative video anyway. Cheers.
Or maybe some loose change...
They did say they heard spooky sounds.
I believe they found something u know how they talk around shit
On Coast to Coast After Dark with Art Bell back in the '90s, they said they heard terrible screams from many voices way down deep. They figured that they must be hearing screams coming out of hell. I still have the CD. Also the CD about Mel's Hole.
The screams could be coming from the living, not the dead. All the missing people that have disappeared/abducted and held captive and being tortured by inner-earth reptilians/E.T.s in underground places.
I dug a hole in my garden. Obviously not as deep as this but it was quite deep. All I found was mud and some stones. I thought they were diamonds but it was gravel.
Not even some gold down there?
i once dug a pretty deep hole in my garden and planted a coin, so that when people in the future dig it out will be confused how is a coin made in 2000's at such depth
Ya sausage
I once dug around in a homeless man's sphinx while he was passed out, found alot of crusty poop and some drugs , took a rip right off his backside
@@petepillow8642 no one cares bro
LOL... Not a good start at 0:15. The diameter of the earth is not 12.754km (that's a 3 hour walk at a brisk pace). The diameter is 12,754 as in twelve thousand, not twelve point something.
Some countries use periods as how we use commas in between numbers to denote thousands and millions and such
USA is not the only country on this planet my friend.
@@dirk9798 the only country that matters. After all, YT is an American entity.
The AI voicebox wouldn't know the difference: the narration appears to be generated, but the facts and numbers were presented in non-U.S. number formatting, with a dot as a thousands separator, while the LLM-based machine learning thingy defaulted to parsing 12.754 (and maybe others) as an Imperial measurement.
I read the thumbnail as "Koala" and thought the Australians had tried it too, lol
🤣🤣🤣
Lmao so did I!
Just 13,000 more miles and the Kola hole could have become the Koala hole.
Oh yes indeed. Many a lonely aussie has explored the koala hole on a friday night.
I've always been fascinated with the perennial layers of dead "planets".
I was going to comment on that!
Were you surprised to learn @ 0:15 that the earth’s equarorial diameter is only12.75 km? 😂
Most 'dead planets' are not actually nearly as dead as people often give them credit for. As an example, Mars is not a geologically dead planet, neither is Venus.
@@heremapping4484 neither is this one....yet.
@@heremapping4484 ok and what that's got to do with this comment lol
When I was a kid we were digging a "foxhole" in my backyard playing Army and hit this weird black seam of what appeared to be coal in red clay. I dug up this weird bronze or brass colored bell with a nude lady on it wearing a weird cone shaped hat with flaps or horns hanging down on the sides and a cape or bat wings. It was half encrusted in the coal and I chipped it off. It had weird symbols on it that looked like what I now realize must have been futhark runes or some kind of pre-sanskrit. It was handmade and had no cast lines or maker's marks on it but you could faintly see where it had been hammered. It had no connection point inside for a tongue or anything. However, if struck with a stone it would put out this unusual tone that would last about 20 seconds that you could feel in the center of your brain like a tickle. I thought this odd because the tone seemed to last much longer than it should have but it was so satisfying and..enticing. Over the course of just a few minutes I sorta became addicted to that tone and wanted more. I kept dinging it and before I knew it the sky was getting dark and I looked over at the kids that were with me and they were frozen like in a trance. Time had gotten away from us. I wanted to take it to school for show and tell but my mom confiscated it due to the naked voluptuous woman and told me she would put it away for when I was an adult. A couple of nights after that I had a bizarre dream where a scantily clad and gorgeous woman with bat wings came to my window sort of humming or singing a sort of lullaby and I went to the window and let her in. She whispered something in my ear in a language I couldn't understand but somehow I knew she wanted me to lie back down in bed. I couldnt renember what happened after that. The next morning my Mom woke me up and asked me why there where flower petals on my pillow. I had no clue. There was dried blood on my lips but I had no wounds anywhere.
When I was 18 I asked for the bell back and she said she couldn't find it. Later my Grandmother told me that my Mom admitted to selling it at a garage sale along with a set of corelle dishes I won in a drawing when I was 9. I remember grammy saying it was for the best as the bell belonged to "the devil's bride".
Somewhere out there is an extremely important artifact found in Bossier City, LA in 1979 and some mook in the Shreveport Bossier area has it on their curio shelf. Way to go Mom. I could have rewritten history if you hadn't robbed your own son to get money to buy more giant spray cans of Aqua-Net hairspray, tupperware, and Benson&Hedges cigarettes.
Dumbest thing I've heard In a long time and I'm an avid political junky.
Thanks for sharing that very interesting experience. Have you come up with any ideas on what the artifact may hve been? What part of the world? Maybe a civilization?
Your ma was trash. Great story thank you. 🕊
Great story. Whether it was real or not, I enjoyed it. Makes my story about my teddy bear being thrown away look even more pathetic than it already was, lol.
You smoke a lot of weed don’t you?
I am actually impressed by the facts stated in this video as I learned them in college Geology classes and rarely hear them anywhere else.
And this was just one borehole. You could probably do millions of superdeep boreholes and each one would be unique.
That was very interesting. Thanks a lot for this video.
u need to wake up kida and do some independant research of YOUR OWN and stop blving your lying masters lol
As deep as that is that didn't even get but somewhere between a quarter of the way and half the way to the mantle. We haven't even cracked the crust yet that's crazy
Surely it's just rock and magma
We're just fungi on a space marble
I hope we don't drill all the way through to the mantel cause then it would no longer be a drill hole it'll be a man-made volcano lol
@@unchargedpickles6372 we should when we know more about space than we know about our own planet I mean do it in a controlled manner which is quite easy to accomplish
What’s crazy is the authority with which science tell us all about what they “know”. When it’s so painfully obvious how little ….
I visited this Deep Hole on the Kola Peninsula in 1995, when drilling was 'temporarily' suspended to exactly this depth. My attention was then caught by a bulging zinc bucket, which was on top of the hole, apparently to prevent the tools from falling into the hole. Out of curiosity, I removed the bucket and listened, if perhaps I could hear the speeches of the 15th Party Congress of China...
Lol
You tried
The well would have been filled with (liquid) "mud", to a level about 3 to 5 m below the drill floor you were walking on. Anything you heard would have been roughnecks doing work in the "cellar deck, echoing up through the "bell nipple".
There are several interesting stories that happened in my country about the wells. In the city of Constantine, where I live in (Algeria, North Africa), where a farmer dug an artesian well on his land, and after 80 meters of drilling, they found carbon materials in a huge amount, and he contacted committees at the Ministry of Energy, and after taking samples of the existing materials, a report came that it was just old car oil, and the well was sunk and banned The place to enter and wells were dug in that area and everything is videos on RUclips you can search on it and there is also a similar story in a city not far from the scene of the first accident about a farmer who dug a well and at a depth of 100 meters the well exploded with hot water and natural gas
IF, it is still available? watch
Dr Steven Reiss (spelling sorry??able) Primary Water in 1985 interview. As I find very interesting, but
The explanation that it was 'old car oil' just doesn't make sense if they are suggesting that it leaked from above. More likely that it was a naturally occurring oil substance that someone didn't want known. Oil being far more abundant or even naturally forming would be inconvenient to oil companies that gain financially from oil being scarce.
@@BlueSpaceLizard you never know what might have been over that lad in the past. down on ol tank farm road where i used to live, the say a whole pool of oil and chemicals sank down into the earth until they hit bedrock and couldnt sink any deeper. all from the old oil facilities that used to be there almost a hundred years ago now. er got the eternal flames brurning up top now and while the earth grows green and looks good, you certainly wouldnt want to drill a water well there. they just put an airport over half or it and problem solved.
what ever dudes real story was.. its not some conspiracy from big oil not wanting you know know about it. ill gurantee you that much. thats the stupidest shit ive ever heard. havent you ever seen there will be blood? if theres profit there, theyll drink your milkshake.
@@BlueSpaceLizard I have read many theories claiming that oil is located in specific places and that it exists naturally, like other natural resources that are in the earth and are inexhaustible, and we have been hearing since the eighties until now in the media that oil will end up inside. 10 or 15 years before the existence of the Internet, I do not know the reality of these theories, I am not a biological expert, but I assure you that I saw oil wells explode like water wells in the desert in my country 70 years ago until now. We also live on top of the largest underground water reservoir on Earth, and the government won't let you extract a gallon of it. From the water without his permission, the drilling license takes several years to accept the drilling of a well for our land, and we hear the same scarecrow that the water will run out and the wells will dry up
@@doom7467 It is more than likely not fossil.
Very interesting. I always thought that what they found was a whole lotta dirt.
Me to lol
They found that too
I believe a vast butchers shop exists 60km down. Sausages are at a knockdown price of £3.50/kilo and they're really tasty.
@@DaveInBridport lol
that's a Zeppelin song, isn't it?
Imagine in a million years when that turbo drill pops up
When you say that we tried to get to the mantle in the early 60's but it unfortunately had no results, what do you mean by "no results"? Did they fail to go deep enough? Did it end up being more than 5 miles deep so they couldn't reach it?
Difficulty increases exponentially with depth. For example, you either need to dig a hole big enough for the whole machine to lower itself Into, and repeat the process again and again to make progress... Which is not feasible, especially in the ocean.
OR.
Like a commercial oil rig, the machine stays on the surface, and the drill is more or less a series of links that can be added to from the top. Drill 10 feet, stop, raise the motor, add a 10ft section of drill, continue drilling, repeat for about 5 miles.
So, one bad locking lug in that chain, and the whole thing fails. Not to mention, the parts at the bottom (actual drill head) will need to be replaced or serviced at some point. So now you have to raise the chain of drill links and take every single one out, store them somewhere, replace the drill head, then lower them all back down in a controlled manner (can't just drop them), again one at a time. The weight of every single piece has to be suspended at once by the machine if there's no earth to support it. Being in the ocean kinda helps this one. A, things fall slower in water and B, the weight of water they displace will offset the weight of the steel a bit. Still fucking heavy.
Repeating this for FIVE MILES is ridiculous. If something breaks and gets stuck, the hole is shot. You can't drill through the old drill. And because it's not actually a straight line, you can't really move the machine 10 ft and try again or you may still hit the old bore hole and damage the new drill. So your moving it a reasonable distance. Again, easier on the ocean. But still sucks.
So yeah I don't doubt they just had a parts failure fairly deep into the drilling and called it quits instead of trying again. Or had several failed attempts.
To say nothing of the temperature, pressure, and toughness of the materials at that depth.
@@OpTicBossaru I don't know why you wrote such a long comment. This had absolutely nothing to do with what my question was. When I ask "what do you mean by "no results" you don't have to go into an essay on how drilling works. That's absurd.
@@OpTicBossaru "You can't drill through the old drill." Actually, you can. The problem is that generally the rock walls are softer than your "milling head", or the broken drill bit (or other tool), so you tend to push the loose part into a pocket you gouge in the side of the borehole, where it lodges until you've drilled (strictly, "milled") far enough ahead in rock that there is space for the broken part to fall into the well behind your milling tools. Then you've got a different jamming mechanism.
Typically, it is safer to pump cement into the bottom of the hole with the debris, let it set solid (holding all the debris in place), then drill back onto that cement plug and let it kick you off in a new direction. After that, you steer the well back onto the original course. There are far fewer unknowns, and while you're committed to (say) 3 days of cementing and re-drilling operations (when a milling operation may only take a day and a half), your maximum time might only be 6 days (doing the job twice) instead of 15 days (for multiple failed milling operations).
Which is professional drilling risk management. Not flailing around desperately, because you've never faced this problem before.
Happens every one in 30 to 50 wells. With a 150+ well CV, I've seen about a half dozen such operations.
I found a petrifued blue clam shell, about 80% intact, high in the mountains of Redding, CA. Pretty cool stuff.
When I was a kid ,my dad was running a backhoe in Tujunga ca mountains and we dug up sea shells..crazy to realize how high the oceans were at one time.
@@Dookie_burner Possibly the land was thrust up over millennia rather than oceans ever being that deep.
@@barrybarnes96 yeah true it is earthquake country.
I heard Sleepy Joe is working hard to potect our rights to life, liberty, and poverty.
Oh hey Redding, Anderson here 😂
Around the time when the drilling took place there was this swedish oil guy who claimed that formafion of oil was due to mineral origins under great preasure at great depth.
What not dead dinosaurs 😂😂😂
Was it Fletcher Prouty?
I think he's right.
Reflux methane under several hundred bar for a few millennia. Who knows what kind of goop you might cookup?
@@jackthepirate9233 No. Tom Gold.
That crew on Oak Island will probably go deeper and find the secrets of the universe in that money pit.
LMFAO 🤣
@@vinylexperience77 L,M,F,A,O....Could this be coordinates for a new drill site at Oak island? Just have to use numerology and the team will definatly uncover somthing after this next comercial break....for sure this time...really just one more commercial break for three other Discovery channel shows and a Cialis ad and youre Gold...well not real gold in a pit or anything but you'll be good, it'll be cool I promise.
man they whipped that dead horse. It just got ridiculous.
Wow! I didn't know the equator was only 12.7 Kilometers in diameter! That's a whole 7.9 miles! I would have guessed it to be just a few more miles longer than that. At least 10 miles or so.
This is gonna save me time going to work. I'll just go thru the earth
I came immediately to the comments section to find this exact one. It's wild for them to get that part wrong in what otherwise seems like a high production video. Proof reading skipped haha
@@justinalias2279 same here.
i was about to type all that and thought someone else would have noticed that straight away lol ,what a fuck up.
@@ighfee they probably missed it because they are talking about a 12 km deep hole, but yeah, still
@@justinalias2279 but the narrator actually said it as well, when you read something back out loud you catch errors, it's called proof reading
All they found was that drill heads can't drill through hard magma. And that has been known for many years. As soon as the pressure gets too high, rock starts to flow. And that binds the drill head and makes it impossible to drill.
they did find something weird stuff that is used these days on cars today. it makes layer on all metal metal - to - metal surfaces and it reduces friction, heat and emissions and also makes engine power back to original or even a bit more. also it does not pour out of engine when you change the oil, it sticks on the friction surfaces and with normal driving style, it lasts for 100 000km without the engine getting worn at all! that is called RVS-technology, from finland! :) i suggest to try it!
Trust me, it's not impossible. But you'd have to have something like a drill bit of pure diamond, and also I believe drilling into magma that's creating a floating shield that deep. The earth will take a nice burp.
@@benjamincoffman261 They were using drill bits of diamond. necessary when drilling through basalt. But the earth would not "take a nice burp", the magma would just flow into the drill bit and clog it. which is what was happening.
@@jessepollard7132 I never think you'd be able to go through the magma regardless. I just meant you could reach that area. It's magma. Nothing exist down there thats solid from what we know till you hit the core.
@@benjamincoffman261 Can't even get that far as the rock gets soft due to the pressure. it flows and crushes the shaft - making it impossible to drill.
this is an amazing presentation. many thanks
Sorry if I'm confused, just trying to get my head around this...how do they know regarding the core and layers etc back up to the surface if we can only drill 9 odd km's down? This is what I'm trying to understand, man or instruments have not got passed the mantle?
Let me tell you my opinion about it...they do not know what is going on...this world is a mystery man...
They're wild guessing with all the confidence of a flim flam man. That's what most of science is: wild ass guesses presented as fact. That way they get to demand "carbon taxes" for your contribution to imaginary emergencies.
some expert said so....so it must be true..also some biological expert said that head of t rex penis was half orange half green
"That's not an 8 year olds question...that's my question...cuz if we didn't go there....and that's the way it happened. And, if we didn't go there, then we need to figure out why so we can go back in the future...." Paraphrasing an astroNOT. If ya know, ya know.
They study earthquake waves traveling through the earth. Different density materials bend the waves differently. With enough waves you can draw a pretty accurate view of the structure of the earth. The density gives them a good idea of the composition.
First and main reason that drilling at Kola Superdeep stopped is collapse of USSR.
No. That happened nearly 2 years before the end of attempts to drill deeper - and nearly 5 years since they had made any progress.
imagine if you was skydiving and you fell into that hole... lol
Hahaha
After misbehaving as a teen I was sent to my uncles, an ex army sarge. He asked me to dig a hole in his backyard leaving me for work. He never returned for 11 days having endured serious work injury. When he came back he saw a 15 foot hole and a malnourished nephew
You were chained up?
How have you survived this long in life?
@@JosiahAndrewNavarrobreathing. Also daily eatings. Regular water. Occasional sunshine.
@@marriedkiwi 📝🧐
7:39 "Resembling some bizarre, giant plant." I love when people have to say things like this because we all know what we think it resembles.
Need me one like this
the subtittle automaticaly.. I LIKE IT SO MUCH 😤👍
They stared into the abyss and realized that it was starting back at them, so they sealed the hole.
Drilled down to Hell like in the movie "9 Miles Down"?
@@imagseer
"Whoever fights monsters should see to it that in the process he does not become a monster. And if you gaze long enough into an abyss, the abyss will gaze back into you."- Frederich Nietzsche
@@petergray7576 It's okay thanks, I got the reference.
extreme heat,thats probably what they discovered down there.
Opposite
Extreme heat & hell
Its 12.754 thousand kilometers isnt it ? (12,754) kilometers .
I think the script was written by someone from a country that uses the period as the thousands separator rather than a comma. Then the person reading the script read it as "12 point 754" rather than "12 thousand 754".
When you get past the bedrock, you fall into the void and lose everything in your inventory.
I worked on a well in Oklahoma and flowed it back for 3 weeks. It only made salt water. Supposed to be an oil well.
Wut 😅explain better pls your comment didn’t make a whole lot of sense
@@kateapple1 I'll tell you what he meant.
He said "I worked on a well in Oklahoma and flowed it back for 3 weeks. It only made salt water. Supposed to be an oil well."
Thanks for repeating the sentence, I still have no idea what he was talking about though.
@@VikingKong. 🤦♂️They drilled a well in Oklahoma, when they started to extract it was nothing but salt water, they was drilling for oil, Oklahoma is land locked.
Bummer...but it happens...
Back when following science actually meant something
now "scientists" tell us men can get pregnant and we can cool down the weather with tax hikes. :(
😆. As soon as I heard him say the ISS is in "deep space" I heard enough. If there was a road going to it you could drive there in a few hours and that's nowhere near deep space 😂.
I stopped at the same place haha. I'm like alright, I'm not sure this guy knows what deep space is.
Exactly, low Earth orbit is nowhere near deep space. It's one step beyond the atmosphere.
But if the deepest we been was 12k kilometers how do they know what's beneath that?
Ive been drilling to a depth of 7inch for the last 25 years 😂
me too.. I heard some screams too couple times
Regularly i've accounter a blow out few time...but i like it
You mean millimeters.
"It is easier to reach space 400km up than it is to drill 12km a third of the way thru Terra·s crust ."
If anyone cares, a little note on the pronunciation of "chikyuu", the Japanese word for the planet earth (地球, basically meaning ground sphere):
The accentuation is not put on the first syllable (ち, chi), but rather on the _second syllable_ (きゅう, kyuu).
Additionally, the "i" in "chi" should be more silent, more as part of the "ch"-sound itself.
So, what you basically end up with is something like: "ch-KYUU", if that makes any sense.
Learning Japanese is on my "To DO" list (I've been a G̅o player for decades, when I can find a partner) as soon as I finish one of my other courses - German, Portuguese, or Kiswahili, - whichever comes first.
This story was generated by a large language model (LLM)-based system, and the voice narration was also generated.
This is a great video and wonderfully narrated. It would be even better while enjoying a little of the wacky baccy !
Yeah, well if you'd watched The Core, you'd know that humanity has drilled down to the Earth's core and restarted its rotation with nuclear bombs. That documentary was wild!
and completely untrue. Oh I know you saw it on TV so it MUST be true. Oh the foolish and their whims.
@@anonimous2451 no very true...I was one of the team
@@Jag-leaper of course you were. Tell me what did you see 7 miles into the abyss?
@@anonimous2451 MOLE PEOPLE
I call BS. Everyone knows dinosaurs have been in shelter down there since the asteroid incident... No one told them it was safe.
VERY interesting. I've never been involved in deep well drilling, but it seems logical that the weight of the drilling rig at extreme depths would inevitably result in failure. Drilling straight down seems to be a flawed strategy, so why not drill at a 45 degree angle and only have the drill head turn?
doesn't help once you are a bit over 1KM down. It is the depth not the length of the hole that is the problem.
@@jessepollard7132 The rig would be supported by the ground it rests on at 45 degrees.
@@lagunafishing The rig was supported by the ground it was on anyway. it takes pressure to cause the bit to bite into rock. at 45% that would be less than half the available pressure as the rest is going sideways. IT also doesn't prevent the rock flowing due to the pressure at 1+km depth.
You add ½ of the actual length to attain the same depth. Plus any plate shift will close it up. I guarantee they chose the spot because of plate stability.
@@benjamincoffman261 Choosing suitable ground locations least prone to collapse is vital. To mitigate potential collapse further, the simple remedy being to incorporate rigging inside sacrificial/permanent sleeve pipes so the drill head and excavations can be safely removed - again at a 45 degree bore angle on which the excavator assembly head would rest. *Horizontal boring apparatus can be used to place pipe sections into position as it progresses.
There’s no way this is true. The Lava People would never allow recordings like that to be made.
This footage was leaked by their rivals, the aldermen from the Sun.
When the diameter of earth is 12000km , the hole should reach the centre by 6000 kms itself 🤔🤔
The scary thing is compared to the earth's size this was only a scratch on the surface...
My two ex wives and some past girlfriends believe you will find my wallet there. Love of some kind is never lost.
400k is not deep space
He didn't say that, you dummy
Of course it is easier for us to explore outer space than go to the Earth's core because any drilling piece would melt long before it got close.
Perhaps, but we can't go past the Van Allen belts at this stage. Almost everything you've ever seen from NASA was fake.
@@mikesalive That's why they calculated at a speed of 25 kph they could pass thru both belts safety. This limited their ships exposure to the radiation to more than survivable levels. Testing revealed @.018 rad or less which is way below acceptable levels. If someone believes NASA moon landings are fake then anything can be.
The lava people are harsh.
Exactly, space is easy, just a vacuum. Down is pressure which we can't handle those extremes.
This is great. I’ve been wanting to know about this hole. This is chock full of juicy data. Thank you!
cant even get the basic dimensions correct at the start
The equator is only just over 12k? might walk it tomorrow so.
Do you want to see more wells... kindly visit south india....
Heavy deep holes
I like deep holes
@@michaellee258 me to
Ayo
I didn’t realize I earth was barely 13 kilometers in diameter yet my moms house is 39 kilometers away🤔. I’ve spent my life going in circles!
Our earth diameter is 12713.6 km (not 13km) and can can check it very easy.
It was a joke. The narrator claimed the earths diameter was “12.754 kilometers “ at 0:15 of the video. When in actuality it it twelve thousand seven hundred and fifty-four miles in diameter. Wake up.
@@Wargasm54 :
In some countries/ languages it’s called/written 12.754 and in some countries/languages 12,754!
@@achimwokeschtla7582 he said 12 point 754 . you don't say the decimal seperator. got it now?
We all spend our lives just going in circles.
The diameter at the equator, at 12 km, is 43 km larger than the polar equator, also 12 km. Literally the first statement in this video
the muppet narrator stumped by decimal point instead of a comma.....real quality :)
00:12 If the planet is only “12.754” in circumference, how come it takes 2 hours to drive across town?
The more they dug the more hole they found...amazing!
how do they know how thick the mantle is if the didn't dig that deep in the first place?
They guess and bullshit
Oops!! - at beginning of video the screen and narrtor refer to the diameter of the earth at the equator as being 12.754 kilometers ("12 point 754 kms") - perhaps you mean 12,754 kms (12 thousand 754 kms)!! ;)
Many countries use the "." instead of the "," in numerical notations so 12.754 km is the same as 12,754 km.
Very interesting and well narrated. Thankyou
Very well done my friend! Thanks for this educational video. If only people would take a break from watching mindless Tik Tok videos this video would have millions of views.
I would laugh if it was a huge eye looking back up at them
At 17 seconds into the video, we are told (verbaly) that Earth's diameter at the equator is "twelve point seven five four" kilometers, not the true value of twelve thousand seven-hundred fifty-four kilometers. The problem, I think, is that the computer voice read the 'dot' as a decimal point (American usage) and not as a separator between the thousands and the hundreds place (European).
Quite obvious, don't you think? Maybe you could also tell us the title of the video and that it's on RUclips.
(The dot is not "European". France, Germany, Austria, Belgium, Italy, Switzerland, etc. all use the comma.)
The AI guy also said people thought oil came from dead planets, instead of plants… 🤷🏻♂️
@@Yeahok-pc2jd LOL, I missed that!
They found the fabled Matryoshka doll of no end; which has now granted to them unlimited magical powers.
0:13 This may blow your mind, but the earth is NOT just 12.754 km around the equator.
Diameter, not circumference!
@@drMaglov I don't care if it's radius. 12 *POINT* 75 kilometers the size of something like a small town. It's a brisk morning hike. It's 7 minutes at highway speeds. The diameter of the earth at the equator is 12 *THOUSAND* 750 (if you're rounding) kilometers.
@@Chatsu8o 12.750k is 12,75 thousand, what is problem?
@@drMaglov He says it very clearly: 12.750 *kilometers* which is 12 750 *METERS*. The real number is 12.75 *thousand kilometers*, Or "Megameters". Which is 12 750 000 meters. That's a HUGE difference.
@@Chatsu8o he said wrong but number displayed is right for diemeter. Point is used in some systems to separate thousands from hundreds.
Damn. Earths diameter is only 12.754 km? I used to travel a longer distance to get to my college. I wonder which planet my college was on.
It is common for people in European nations to use a period in the place of commas and commas in the place of periods in numbers.
@@Syrnian commas and periods have a specific place in mathematics. That aside, even in the video it was pronounced as 12.754 km. Not the right use of punctuation and neither the right use of pronunciation.
@@srinu20040303 The US and England are outside the norm using periods and commas in numbers. Most of the rest of the world uses a commas were we use periods and periods were we use commas.
@@Syrnian I don't think so. Even us uses commas to split numbers and periods for decimals. As per UK. I don't know.
@@srinu20040303 Do not think so what? Most of the world uses them opposite than us.
Clickbait questions, no answers.
Soviets on weed "Comrade...comrade...broski....let's... let's.......like drill a well and just like keep going. Like I mean no stopping...just keep going! Like forever.... Blyat you got any snacks?"
For them to put an age and a date is virtually impossible.....
Wouldn't drilling a hole into the mantel just be called a man-made volcano?
Possibly. But the magma would cool on its way up, most likely just plugging the hole.
@@KF1 hope so. Also, they shouldn't do it until the 2020s are over if they want it to cool and not make a volcano, the 2020s are too sketchy to try new things like that lol
As a representative of the reptilian underground overlords I promise it is just rock and such and i wouldn't waste my time and resources worrying about it.
0:22 so is it 12,711 as it’s shown or 12,771 as you said?
Why does AI created content leave that bad aftertaste? Like a sugar substitute. 👎
Blud this is from 2 years ago
Bc it's inhuman. But is this video ai?
Aside from the astronomical cost of moving material, would a cone shaped hole be far more feasible engineering wise? Basically, imagine an upside down pyramid (cone). When you want to go deeper, you simultaneously widen the hole while going deeper.
No
Sure. Just would be a lot of work
That would be an open pit mine. The largest, Bingham Canyon Mine in UT, which has been in production since 1906, is 1.2 km deep and 4 km wide. That gives us W=3.33D, so at the 30km thinnest part of the crust, you'd need a cone shaped hole 100km wide to reach the mantle, which requires removing 236 trillion cubic meters of earth.
No, and the drill head is kind of like that anyway. Usually three teeth head. That grind it up, with a pump behind it to get out debris that doesn't smooth against the walls.
@@benjamincoffman261 Not quite. those drills bore a straight tunnel.
This video reminds me of when you have to write a paper a certain length and you just fill it with nonsense that's not fact. Like when they said how the world became humbled at how little they know.. just filler BS.
Best comment on here but not many replies to it. Looks like this video is mainly watched by people that believe anything 😂
😂
This whole channel is like that.
Fun fact. The internal layers of the earth are theoretical. We have no idea.
Speaking as one of the several hundred thousand people who drill wells for a living, the layering is as plain as the change in colour of the shale shakers when you drill into a new layer and circulate the samples up.
If humans have dug only 12.262km then how do you know the crust is 35-45km thick on average? Our lack of knowledge about the earths crust today is comparable to the lack of knowledge about the deep ocean life prior to 1872. Until we dig that far or develop a mechanism to see through the mantil, we will never really be sure.
It’s actually because of earthquakes. When triangulating them we have a known time and distance between 3+ points. We also know that earthquakes make s and p waves of which only p waves travel through liquid. Comparing the differences in both waves on different sides of the planet lets us determine the depth of the crust and that our planet has at least partially liquid internals.
We know how deep the crust is by observing S waves and P waves from Earthquakes.
S waves for example do not pass through a liquid so they stop at a depth of about 2,800 km. This must mean there is a liquid in the interior of the planet.
I’ve been lied to about the diameter of the Earth my entire life!
This video got it wrong, it’s not 12km, it’s 12 thousand kilometres,
Your not the father of the son!
Things are always smaller in real life 😁
@@S.H.A.D.O.999 That's not true!
Holy shit me too! I was always taught it was about 25,000 miles in diameter.
if you wanna save yourself about 20 minutes, all they found was temperatures too high to continue drilling any further.
Tiktok destroyed minds... Pathetic generation
Hilo, Haiwaii volcano hot lava . Is the one they want to see ?😮😮😮
Interesting, thank you. You should also have someone proofread your narration.