English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I was reading the news the other day (CNN or BBC, don't remember which) and I read this article about a robot that was going to be sent to investigate a hole in the Earth's crust. Apparently there was a spot where the crust was completely missing, so the seawater was exposed directly to the outer mantle and formed a special kind of rock. I want to know what the name of the robot was, where the hole was, and what the special kind of rock was called. Can you help? Thanks.

2007-03-12 16:52:37 · 2 answers · asked by pitachips3 2 in Science & Mathematics Earth Sciences & Geology

2 answers

A)Toby
B) about 2000 nautical miles sw of the Canary Islands in the Atlantic
C) peridotite and dunite (the upper mantle is composed of ultramafic rock called peridotite which is mostly olivines and pyroxenes. Dunite is a more olivine rich peridotite. The olivine is a green mineral which gives peridotite it's greenish brown color.


http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070306/ap_on_sc/seabed_expedition

SANTA CRUZ DE TENERIFE, Canary Islands - British scientists have embarked on a mission to study a huge area on the Atlantic seabed where the Earth's crust is mysteriously missing and instead is covered with dark green rock from deep inside the planet.


The 12-member expedition to take an unprecedented peek at Earth's mantle left the Canary Islands on Monday with a new high-tech vessel and a robotic device named Toby that will dig up rock samples at the site and film what it sees.

The main site — there is at least one other in roughly the same area and a third is suspected — is about three miles below the surface of the Atlantic and located about 2,000 nautical miles southwest of the Canaries.

It is part of a globe-spanning ridge of undersea volcanos, the kind of structure that forms when Atlantic tectonic plates separate and lava surges upward to fill the gap in the Earth's crust.

But that apparently did not happen this time. Where there should be a four-mile-thick layer of crust, there is instead that much mantle — the very dense, dark green rock that makes up the deep inner layer of the Earth.

Scientists have seen chunks of mantle that have been spewed up with lava, but never such a large, exposed stretch.

"It is like a window into the interior of the Earth," Bramley Murton, a geophysicist who is taking part in the six-week mission, said Tuesday from the research ship RRS James Cook as it headed to the site, still five days away.

This exposed layer is irregularly shaped, about 30 miles long and perhaps that distance or more at its widest. It was detected about five years ago with sonar from a surface vessel.

There are two main theories as to what happened, Murton said: A fault ripped away huge chunks of crust, or in an area of crust-forming volcanoes, this area was mysteriously devoid of that outer material, Murton said.

Roger Searle of Durham University, one of the lead researchers, said the study aims to provide insight on everything from the chemistry of oceans to the mechanisms of how the Earth behaves under so much water.

The robotic device will land on the exposed mantle, deploy a drill, and dig into the rock to bring back samples.

The project is being financed by Britain's National Environment Research Council and the Department of trade and Industry's Large Scientific Facilities Fund.

2007-03-12 17:13:23 · answer #1 · answered by GatorGal 4 · 0 0

Gort (from "Day the Earth Stood Still" w/Michael Rennie)
Mantel rock. (no relation to "Fraggle Rock")

2007-03-12 17:06:00 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers