How is 180 degree Celsius so hot that rocks behave like plastic? Rocks usually have a melting point of over a 1000 degree Celsius. Could it be that the friction of drilling itself could increase the temp to that range?
@@sbernoulli Thats true but high pressure increases the boiling point of water no? I'm assuming drilling increases the pressure of the contact surface and the surroundings..
Yes but you are missing one thing. The melting point varies between different types of rocks, so maybe it is a type of sandstone as well as friction creating that elastic property?
I think the small radius of the hole makes it even more uncomfortable imagine being inside a hole that is just as big as you and you have to go deeper down and with every step you lose your mind even more until you just fall off
Some mess about Km/m and ./,. British way: the comma represents the thousand positional value and the point introduces the decimals of the numeral decimals, it's the decimal separator . Other European Western countries (and I suppose some more around the word): the point is the thousand positional value and the comma is the decimal separator, the point too (here again more mess). So this video is in English but this number it's written as in European Western countries.
@Dark Waters Ok you use Western Europe Countries writing so 1,2262 myriameters (mym) because mil is nothing milli maybe, but really small metric prefix.
@@Surrounded_me Ok she's American and she read exactly what it's written 12,262km (twelve thousand ... km). It should've been written 12,262m or 12.262km according to an American person.
No. Even if engineers were to drill directly into a reservoir of molten magma, a volcanic eruption would be extremely unlikely. For one thing, drill holes are too narrow to transmit the explosive force of a volcanic eruption.
@@56independent I deny scientism. Where is this data coming from? Do we have some new technology that can penetrate the planet? If so, why aren’t we using it for communication instead of sending signals around the outer surface? 🤔
We've never come close to piercing the "first layer" of the earth, yet we think we know the exact number of layers and what they are made of down to the core. All this based on the wiggly lines of a seismometer. Sounds like a lot of over confidence.
The moment we finally get a few miles down, we realize our temperature map was off by double haha. How wrong do we think we are about the core? Scientists take so much granted, it's ridiculous. Like talking about the beginning of the universe as if they were there and took readings. It's bonkers.
There is an explanation for all these hot temperatures that continue to be found but it will require a complete overhaul on how the evolution of our planet is assumed. Only a massive paradigm shift that rejects the assumption our planet was made from gas and dust will explain this problem. Our planet began its life as a mass of what is called quark plasma. This is the same state of matter black holes are made of. The big bang was our universe turning itself into a gargantuan particle collider and the galaxies are quark plasma shrapnel from this event. All the black holes, stars, planets, and moons are a result of the evolution of this plasma. The Earth's journey to creating all of its elements starts when the mass takes the quarks it is made of and fuses them with the dark matter of space, which is made of extremely pressurized electron neutrinos, to create the first neutrons the mass will possess. This gives the black hole its first light and turns it into a neutron star although the mass is still predominantly a black hole. The neutrons then break down to the first hydrogen atoms the mass will possess. Then, the constantly forming neutrons fuse with the hydrogen to create the first helium atoms using the beta minus decay reaction. This process continues creating heavier elements making the star get darker and darker until the light is extinguished and a surface forms. At that point, an atmosphere develops since the surface is now safe from the quark plasma energy just under the surface. This is why scientists found "boiling hydrogen" at the bottom of the Kola superdeep hole that they couldn't explain. This hole is a window to the processes that actually run our planet. This is why all holes drilled into the Earth end up much hotter than theories suggested.
Only if today's people are also science-driven like those behind the hole. If we funded even more for the sake of science, we would be discovering even more knowledge and the hole might be deeper than ever.
1:03 If you listen closely you can hear the narrator's voice break a little when she catches the mistake in the script that equates 7.5 miles with 12,262km 😂 Almost to suggest she was like "there's no way that number is correct"
Length of drill hole does not always equal the true vertical depth below surface . Drill holes can start off vertical and become horizontal . A lot of oil wells have horizontal sections
@@djtbone001a ok, but unfortunately neither you nor this channel have managed to clarify what that is defined as; longer as in horizontal drilling versus deeper as in straight down? @One Minute Explore
@@OneMinuteExplore would you please clarify what the difference between longer and deepest is supposed to mean, and how are each respectively achieved? Context is everything.
Try to imagine this if you could a 40,000ft deep hole drilled into the earth. Now when we usually drill holes its for wells or oil. Wells at 100ft and oil at 1000m. This hole is 7.5 miles deep. So that would be about 8 tons of pressure per square inch. This hole is 9 inches wide. Fire hoses are around 2.5 inches wide. So it could deliver 4 times greater water flow. Fire hoses pressure is about 300psi. Have you seen how powerful that flow can be? Now multiply that times 4. Pretty impressive right? Now take into mind water flowing at 17,919.999 PSI. Absolutely devastating. Now Say that the hollow earth theory is correct or the possibility of any civilization inhabiting cave systems far into the earth, like Argatha. In every range of type of human screams all sound the same no matter what culture or type of human. Now imagine that suddenly above head your city has a hole opened up above you and 8 tones of pressure is directed through a 9 inch hole. Now put a microphone there and see what it sounds like. We did drill into hell, a hell we created through poor consideration of the repercussions it could cause if there was any life at the end of the hole. One thing we did discover from this is that the hollow earth theory may have been proven right by this hell we unleashed onto these people.
This mistake was not about miles-to-kilometers conversion, they simply weren't aware that germans use "." and "," differently when writing numbers. Germans seperate decimals with a comma and add dots for readability every 3 digits. So, twelve thousand kilometers is 12.000 in german while 12,262 km means 12 kilometers and 262 meters aka 12262 meters. Of course they still should have been suspicous but hey
Blow up? No. More like deflate or implode, like a balloon. If you release the magma from the center to the surface, the planet wouldn’t lose any mass. It would basically just turn inside out. 😂
@@OneMinuteExplore rewatch your own video. At the 1 minute mark you type AND say “12,262 KM”. Not “meters”. Obviously this is a mistake, just laughing at it.
"Humans have since dug longer boreholes, [...] but the hole in Kola one remains the deepest." Gives you plenty to think about. So not rats, or aliens, no, humans. Longer? Like horizontal? Apples? Oranges? Besides, why is this video exactly the same than on Amazing Stock but with other audio?
Nato geo with such a big error in a video 12,262 km.. 😵💫😵💫😁😁 And yes russia with such deep hole can generate unlimited free energy with such high temp there
Thank you. Why doesn’t nobody think for themselves and ask these types of questions. I always question the information they give us about space as well.
Because math We know how old our planet is and we know how the surface has changed based on all sorts of stuff from the carbon of our atmosphere to the minerals of rocks We have a pretty good idea of how our planet is layered even if we dont know a lot about these layers themselfs
There's two basic kinds of depth. True vertical depth (TVD) is the vertical distance from the surface to the depth of the well, or how deep into the Earth's surface you go. Measured depth (MD) is the total distance along the wellbore. Wells like the Z-44 Chayvo have higher MDs because they are drilled horizontally for a great distance, but Kola has a greater TVD because it goes much deeper into the subsurface than the other wells.
Hello. I read that there was a story of people who drilled the hole, and heard cries of souls in hell. Do you have cases of actual people who were there during the event?
I have a doubt this is the world's deepest man whole then how did scientist get to know that we have different types of earth layer without digging how??how did they get to know. (If any one knows about this plz answer to my questions )
Wouldn’t necessarily call it “free” energy but I see what you’re getting at. Although would steam either not be absorbed by dirt or condensate before reaching the surface?
The force due to the upper half of the Earth cancels the force due to the lower half at the center of the Earth. Similarly, any force due to any portion of the Earth at its center will be cancelled by the portion opposite to it. As a result, the gravitational force at the center of anybody will be zero.
How is 180 degree Celsius so hot that rocks behave like plastic? Rocks usually have a melting point of over a 1000 degree Celsius. Could it be that the friction of drilling itself could increase the temp to that range?
Nice observation lol
Probably it have connection with pressure. I mean, water boiling temperature change if the altitude change
@@sbernoulli Thats true but high pressure increases the boiling point of water no? I'm assuming drilling increases the pressure of the contact surface and the surroundings..
Yes but you are missing one thing.
The melting point varies between different types of rocks, so maybe it is a type of sandstone as well as friction creating that elastic property?
I never understood that either, I kinda assume it had something to do with hydrated minerals.
12 thousand km? 😂😂 more 12 thousand meters = 12km
That's what you call low IQ. That's also the time to stop the video and move on...
That's what happens when the rest of the world uses metric and some idiots use Imperial 😂
What did you expect?
She's american
Yo ganja ganja
😂😂😂
The confidence in 12000km🤣🤣🤣
I think the small radius of the hole makes it even more uncomfortable imagine being inside a hole that is just as big as you and you have to go deeper down and with every step you lose your mind even more until you just fall off
I mean if i would be one of my geckos this could be a thing lol
Daaaaaamn, chill Satan.
1:05 12 thousand kilometers? That's almost to Australia. Impressive 🤣
Some mess about Km/m and ./,. British way: the comma represents the thousand positional value and the point introduces the decimals of the numeral decimals, it's the decimal separator . Other European Western countries (and I suppose some more around the word): the point is the thousand positional value and the comma is the decimal separator, the point too (here again more mess). So this video is in English but this number it's written as in European Western countries.
@@ilkeadrall710 one thing is to write coma or point, but another is to say twelve thousand kilometres and that woman said exactly that
@Dark Waters Ok you use Western Europe Countries writing so 1,2262 myriameters (mym) because mil is nothing milli maybe, but really small metric prefix.
@@Surrounded_me Ok she's American and she read exactly what it's written 12,262km (twelve thousand ... km). It should've been written 12,262m or 12.262km according to an American person.
@@ilkeadrall710 Don't be fooled. This is probably a realistic robotic voice, not a human. They out themselves with such ludicrous mistakes.
Is the narrator's vocal fry actual real? It makes listening to this documentary actually impossible.
Unfortunately, we cannot change the voice on YTB
Stupid question but wouldn't drilling to the mantle create an artificial volcano?
No. Even if engineers were to drill directly into a reservoir of molten magma, a volcanic eruption would be extremely unlikely. For one thing, drill holes are too narrow to transmit the explosive force of a volcanic eruption.
@@OneMinuteExplore In other words, we don't know what would happen because we've never come close to doing it.
@@rovingmauler7410 That's not another words, your assumptions.
@@bojackhorsingaround In English, please.
@@bojackhorsingaround ohh because you’ve done it before huh.
12 Thousand Kilometers????... Houston, we have a problem!!
Last time I check 7.5 miles is not over 12,000 kilometers
12,262 km below the earth's surface. Hard to take the facts from this site when they can't figure out what metric is,
it's 12.262 km, not 12,262 km for sure......Earth's diameter is 12,742 km !
nice trying to copy the nat geo logo
Never pierced the crust but we know what the core looks like. yeah right.
We don't need to look at something to see how it looks. We can use data to see what temperature and material things are
@@56independent 🤣
@@djtbone001a Do you really deny science?
@@56independent I deny scientism. Where is this data coming from? Do we have some new technology that can penetrate the planet? If so, why aren’t we using it for communication instead of sending signals around the outer surface? 🤔
@@djtbone001a we have fibre optics on the ocean floor.
1:04 Hold on... lmao this doesn't seem right.
Sorry it's 12,262 meters
I knew something was fishy...i saw the same thing on tiktok
Damn that's deep
oh Yeah that's the deepest hole on earth
That deep's damned
Yeah, but you need to fix your video. It's not 12000 km. @@OneMinuteExplore
We've never come close to piercing the "first layer" of the earth, yet we think we know the exact number of layers and what they are made of down to the core. All this based on the wiggly lines of a seismometer.
Sounds like a lot of over confidence.
The moment we finally get a few miles down, we realize our temperature map was off by double haha. How wrong do we think we are about the core? Scientists take so much granted, it's ridiculous. Like talking about the beginning of the universe as if they were there and took readings. It's bonkers.
Sound like a flat earther
@@scotteyer6954 That's not an argument against what I said. Ad hominem.
It took 2years....this lady fkd it all up
free energy .
let that hot temperature boil water .
vocal fry driving me crazy💀💀💀
There is an explanation for all these hot temperatures that continue to be found but it will require a complete overhaul on how the evolution of our planet is assumed. Only a massive paradigm shift that rejects the assumption our planet was made from gas and dust will explain this problem.
Our planet began its life as a mass of what is called quark plasma. This is the same state of matter black holes are made of. The big bang was our universe turning itself into a gargantuan particle collider and the galaxies are quark plasma shrapnel from this event. All the black holes, stars, planets, and moons are a result of the evolution of this plasma. The Earth's journey to creating all of its elements starts when the mass takes the quarks it is made of and fuses them with the dark matter of space, which is made of extremely pressurized electron neutrinos, to create the first neutrons the mass will possess. This gives the black hole its first light and turns it into a neutron star although the mass is still predominantly a black hole. The neutrons then break down to the first hydrogen atoms the mass will possess. Then, the constantly forming neutrons fuse with the hydrogen to create the first helium atoms using the beta minus decay reaction. This process continues creating heavier elements making the star get darker and darker until the light is extinguished and a surface forms. At that point, an atmosphere develops since the surface is now safe from the quark plasma energy just under the surface.
This is why scientists found "boiling hydrogen" at the bottom of the Kola superdeep hole that they couldn't explain. This hole is a window to the processes that actually run our planet. This is why all holes drilled into the Earth end up much hotter than theories suggested.
Any suggested further reading on this?
I expect only the kola borehole explanation, but i received even more insight. Great job!!!
Thank you Angga
How's u get past 20 seconds? Omg I can't listen to that
@@ajcook7777 wdym, the voice is fine
12,262km. That's some deep hole ;-)
More 2.5k kms to reach another side of earth XD
Only if today's people are also science-driven like those behind the hole. If we funded even more for the sake of science, we would be discovering even more knowledge and the hole might be deeper than ever.
if its 12000 plus km its not a hole , its a bore well for other planets from earth
minecraft logic be like :just grab a picaxe,some shovels,foods ,diamond armors and start digging
Technically Minecraft logic be like: look down, use your fists, and be patient.
You forgot to mention the sounds of hell in the Kola Superdeep Borehole
Its scam
@@sebastianbrzezinski3876You look like a handsome Robert Fico
1:03 If you listen closely you can hear the narrator's voice break a little when she catches the mistake in the script that equates 7.5 miles with 12,262km 😂
Almost to suggest she was like "there's no way that number is correct"
i love that we only have dug 7,5 miles but show pictures of how the rest of the earth is made up. LOL
12,622 KM 😱 and then i realised I mistook the logo of this channel with Nat geo 🧐 bbyee one minute👋🏻
I'm American and even I knew that conversation to kilometers was waaay off
This woman’s low tone crackle voice is killing me
🤦🏽♂️😂
Same
Someone tell Disney to make the movie about Ant-Man going down this whole it's a lot better what they're making now
Need a material that can handle extreme heat and pressure. And a laser.
1:04 12,262 km? Lmao what? 😂
it's a math test, you're good
@@OneMinuteExplore trust me, I am not. XD
I’m here because of What If UA-cam channel
Welcome to oneminutexplore family
So they've dug deeper boreholes than kola but kola still remains the deepest? Huh?
No, the kola still the deepest
Length of drill hole does not always equal the true vertical depth below surface . Drill holes can start off vertical and become horizontal . A lot of oil wells have horizontal sections
No. They’ve dug longer holes but not deeper ones.
@@djtbone001a ok, but unfortunately neither you nor this channel have managed to clarify what that is defined as; longer as in horizontal drilling versus deeper as in straight down? @One Minute Explore
@@OneMinuteExplore would you please clarify what the difference between longer and deepest is supposed to mean, and how are each respectively achieved? Context is everything.
Can we keep it in SI units? ^_^ So confusing to hear both every single time, and then an inconsistent switch
Yeah
Use Km's
If its 250° inside the Earth, then don't you think the Earth would be super hot on the surface and water would evaporate under the surface in no time!
Try to imagine this if you could a 40,000ft deep hole drilled into the earth. Now when we usually drill holes its for wells or oil. Wells at 100ft and oil at 1000m. This hole is 7.5 miles deep. So that would be about 8 tons of pressure per square inch. This hole is 9 inches wide. Fire hoses are around 2.5 inches wide. So it could deliver 4 times greater water flow. Fire hoses pressure is about 300psi. Have you seen how powerful that flow can be? Now multiply that times 4. Pretty impressive right? Now take into mind water flowing at 17,919.999 PSI. Absolutely devastating. Now Say that the hollow earth theory is correct or the possibility of any civilization inhabiting cave systems far into the earth, like Argatha. In every range of type of human screams all sound the same no matter what culture or type of human. Now imagine that suddenly above head your city has a hole opened up above you and 8 tones of pressure is directed through a 9 inch hole. Now put a microphone there and see what it sounds like. We did drill into hell, a hell we created through poor consideration of the repercussions it could cause if there was any life at the end of the hole. One thing we did discover from this is that the hollow earth theory may have been proven right by this hell we unleashed onto these people.
Meanwhile my oven makes pizza at 400 degrees just fine 😂😅.
Surprised a nuke wasn't used to go deeper 🤣
Nukes aren't real.
She is reading from the prompter without even thinking what it means...12262 km....hahaha
7 miles...12000 kms
Who said anything about falling into it?! WTF why would you even put the thought of the thought in my head.... well, I'm never sleeping again
That vocal fry is insane. Quit smoking lol
Mantle temperature of only 250 C ? A kitchen oven approaches that.
Consider the pressure though. A stove can’t do that.
Isn't the hole 12,262 meters instead of 12000 kilometers? 40,000ft is 12,19km so the hole is 12 kilometers deep not 12,000 kilometers.
Just saw MetaBallStudios video about deepest human things
its not 12, 262.km it's only 12.26 kM
yeah, thank you
yeah, thank you
LOL well done Americans with miles-to-kilometers conversion 😅 12000 kilometers?
This mistake was not about miles-to-kilometers conversion, they simply weren't aware that germans use "." and "," differently when writing numbers. Germans seperate decimals with a comma and add dots for readability every 3 digits. So, twelve thousand kilometers is 12.000 in german while 12,262 km means 12 kilometers and 262 meters aka 12262 meters. Of course they still should have been suspicous but hey
who came here from infinite comparison?
Me
@@bing_salt nice
Welcome to the family
Welcome aboard
LOL, how the fuck can I take anything in this video seriously when just 1 minute in it equates 7.5 miles to 12 THOUSAND kilometers?
vocal fry is so strong that my steaks are now well-done
I don't know why it annoys me but it does
Came here looking for this comment. Unbearable
The only thing deeper than that hole is a Tool album.
😆😆😆
Wouldn't this blow up the planet releasing pressure
Blow up? No. More like deflate or implode, like a balloon. If you release the magma from the center to the surface, the planet wouldn’t lose any mass. It would basically just turn inside out. 😂
1:05 meters, not kilometers.
Y’all need to tell the truth hell is down there
Yeah, holes evoke cosmic horror to me.
356 degrees equals an unlimited supply of energy using steam to make electricity.
How can there be two bore holes that are deeper but the one in Russia remains the deepest?
Other holes are longer but not deeper. A lot of modern Oil&Gas drills are not being done fully vertically or not in a straight line.
I love that this hole is 12,000 Kilometers deep lol
It's 12k meters.
@@OneMinuteExplore rewatch your own video. At the 1 minute mark you type AND say “12,262 KM”. Not “meters”. Obviously this is a mistake, just laughing at it.
Why is this not being used for geothermal energy?
She keeps saying KORA with an R, but it's KOLA.
12k? Kilometers?
More like 12. 262 klm
7.5 miles is not 12,000 km
"Twelve thousand km" ????? You mean 12 km deep.
"Humans have since dug longer boreholes, [...] but the hole in Kola one remains the deepest." Gives you plenty to think about. So not rats, or aliens, no, humans. Longer? Like horizontal? Apples? Oranges? Besides, why is this video exactly the same than on Amazing Stock but with other audio?
Nato geo with such a big error in a video 12,262 km.. 😵💫😵💫😁😁 And yes russia with such deep hole can generate unlimited free energy with such high temp there
12,000 KM is over 7,000 miles. Did they mean 12,000 meters?
12.226 meters, sorry for the mistake
@@OneMinuteExplore its kilometres you are mistaken again
@@Bayeak shh every body makes mistakes.
How does one know how thick the earth's crust is if the deepest they've dug is "apparently" only 1/3 of the way through the crust? 🤔🤔
Thank you. Why doesn’t nobody think for themselves and ask these types of questions. I always question the information they give us about space as well.
Seismology…
Because math
We know how old our planet is and we know how the surface has changed based on all sorts of stuff from the carbon of our atmosphere to the minerals of rocks
We have a pretty good idea of how our planet is layered even if we dont know a lot about these layers themselfs
@@valletas we?
@@jayvlugt3309 i meant we as in the collective knowledge about the planet *we* humans have aquired over the years
How does she say there have since been deeper boreholes dug and then says the Kola borehole remains the deepest???
I think she misspoke. There are longer holes, but Kola is the deepest. This is because Kola goes straight down, but others are curved.
There's two basic kinds of depth. True vertical depth (TVD) is the vertical distance from the surface to the depth of the well, or how deep into the Earth's surface you go. Measured depth (MD) is the total distance along the wellbore. Wells like the Z-44 Chayvo have higher MDs because they are drilled horizontally for a great distance, but Kola has a greater TVD because it goes much deeper into the subsurface than the other wells.
I belive it's got to be something related to sea level.
I think there were some typos here.
Superdeep borehole
thank you
Welcome Mido
There is no way you can fall into a 9 inch hole in diameter? Tell that to Chris watts.
Why only 1 recording?
Lack of material
Hello. I read that there was a story of people who drilled the hole, and heard cries of souls in hell. Do you have cases of actual people who were there during the event?
Thank you so much
Welcome Moroccan
You told 12 thousands 262km XD
Sorry it was a mistake, we correct it on comments, thanks for watching
Thank you
Welcome Sana
Gracias por compartir, saludos desde Venezuela
1:04 metres... no proofreading?
imagine you drop your phone in there xD
7.5miles deep, or 12,500km deep? Confusing
I have a doubt this is the world's deepest man whole then how did scientist get to know that we have different types of earth layer without digging how??how did they get to know. (If any one knows about this plz answer to my questions )
As master oogway said "if there is a hole there is a way)
INTERESTING THANK YOU
You're welcome
12 KM not 12 thousands km lol
The vocal fry on her voice is killing me 💀
Throw water down there and it turns to steam because of high temp….use to run turbines…free energy ? Smh !
Good idea 💡👍
Wouldn’t necessarily call it “free” energy but I see what you’re getting at. Although would steam either not be absorbed by dirt or condensate before reaching the surface?
@@CLbro1 well it’s sustainable and I’m sure they could find a way to harvest the steam without that if that’s what they intended
That's exactly what I was thinking, infinite energy!
I am sure they can make something happen with that amount of free heat.
How likely is it that a humanoid species inhabits the space between the surface and the upper mantle? There would be so much more room down there.
Her vocal fry is actually deeper than the hole.
hhhh nice one
Most popular fox on a furrycon be like:
what?
Lmao
wtf
Not really trying to figure out what happens when we hit the mantle
i wonder what's gravity like, at the centre of the earth
The force due to the upper half of the Earth cancels the force due to the lower half at the center of the Earth. Similarly, any force due to any portion of the Earth at its center will be cancelled by the portion opposite to it. As a result, the gravitational force at the center of anybody will be zero.
In short, we don't know.
We know more about stars than mud.
So true
The barely scratched the surface....we live on a plane my friends....they just added a t at the end
Super good information im from india
Thank you and welcome RVJ
12 thousand km? ok I found the comment start.