Hole In The Earth

Hole In The Earth




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Hole In The Earth
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

^ " Billboard.com - Artist Chart History — Deftones: Singles" . Billboard.com . Retrieved 2007-12-23 .

^ "UK Singles Top 75 - Music Charts" . Navigate to appropriate week . acharts.us . Retrieved 2007-12-23 .

^ "Hole in the Earth | Deftones" . MTV . Retrieved 11 September 2010 .

^ "Hole In the Earth/Guitar Hero 3" . Deftones in Studio. 2008-06-03. Archived from the original on 2008-03-12 . Retrieved 2008-06-07 .

^ "Official Scottish Singles Sales Chart Top 100" . Official Charts Company . October 22, 2006 . Retrieved February 14, 2022 .

^ "Official Singles Chart Top 100" . Official Charts Company . October 22, 2006 . Retrieved February 14, 2022 .

^ "Deftones Chart History (Alternative Airplay)" . Billboard . Retrieved August 7, 2017.

^ "Deftones Chart History (Mainstream Rock)" . Billboard . Retrieved August 7, 2017.


" Hole in the Earth " is a song by the American alternative metal band Deftones . The song was released as the first single from their fifth album, Saturday Night Wrist , and appeared as the album's opening track.

"Hole in the Earth" was released to radio airplay on September 12, 2006. It charted relatively well, peaking at No. 18 and No. 19 in Billboard 's Alternative Songs and Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks charts, [1] respectively, and in 69th position in the UK Singles Chart . [2]

A music video was filmed for the single, directed by Brian Lazzaro. [3]

The song was released as downloadable content for Guitar Hero III: Legends of Rock on March 6, 2008, [4] and for Rock Band , Rock Band 2 and Rock Band 3 on June 8, 2010. It was also featured in the video game Saints Row 2 .

A remix of the song was produced by Danny Lohner for the soundtrack album of the film Underworld: Rise of the Lycans , released January 13, 2009.

The song was also featured during one of the scenes in the 2013 black comedy film This Is the End .


Album: Saturday Night Wrist ( 2006 )
Deftones lead singer Chino Moreno explained that this song is a reference to the turmoil they went through making the Saturday Night Wrist album. About a year into recording, Moreno felt it wasn't up to standard and started putting his efforts into his ambient music side project, Team Sleep. Moreno was also going through a divorce and doing a lot of speed, which didn't help. "Hole in the Earth" was Moreno's way of addressing that challenges he and his bandmates faced to make the record. Chino says he didn't explain his lyrics to the band until after the album was recorded.
This was the first single released from Saturday Night Wrist . The album title is a reference to a medical condition one of Moreno's friends suffered called Saturday Night Palsy, which is caused by sleeping with your arm over a chair or with someone lying on it - typically the person has passed out drunk when this happens. A notable victim of this condition is Dave Mustaine from Megadeth.
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Other marks contained on this website are the property of their respective owners. Top5 is an independent comparison and review website may contain references to products from one or more of Top5 advertisers. Top5 is a free to use website is supported through compensation when you click on links to products. Please read our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use .
This website is not intended to provide medical advice or to take the place of medical advice and treatment from your personal physician. Visitors are advised to consult their own doctors or other qualified health professional regarding the treatment of medical conditions. The author shall not be held liable or responsible for any misunderstanding or misuse of the information contained on this site or for any loss, damage, or injury caused, or alleged to be caused, directly or indirectly by any treatment, action, or application of any food or food source discussed in this website. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration have not evaluated the statements on this website. The information is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
Top5 » Deepest Hole On Earth Permanently Sealed After 2 Billion Year Old Discovery
For decades. a drill has been spiraling down deep towards the core of the earth in a quiet place in Russia.
This abyss that would be left 40,000 feet below the surface would make it the deepest borehole on Earth. But something strange and unexpected would happen while they were drilling. Making researchers run to try to close it up.

Man has always had the curiosity to explore the unknown. Ever since they got into space, they’ve looked back at Earth to find more secrets.
Space had become easier and easier to explore as new technologies are developed. So going back to Earth to find things that have never been explored has now become a priority.

We now know more about space than what’s back home on our planet.
The space race is the biggest reason why so many advances have been made in space exploration. When the U.S. and U.S.S.R. were in competition to get to space first.

In the late 1950s both Russia and the U.S. decided to start digging deep into the Earth to try and make some discoveries about the world we live in.
What was known at the time was that the Earth’s crust is 30 miles thick. And below this is – in theory – the mantle. The mantle is around 40 percent of the Earth.

The U.S. made good progress in 1958 when they started Project Mohole in Mexico, near Guadalupe. They wanted to drill into the Pacific Ocean bed.
Then they wanted to figure out more about the dirt that they stood on. But then, it would be abandoned only eight years later.

After eight years of progress, the project was unplugged only eight years later when funding was cut.
The drill was only 600 feet deep when they had to stop. This meant that they were nowhere near the mantle where they wanted to dig. But a team decided to keep working where they had stopped.

The Soviets decided to start their own work digging in 1970. They did it in a remote region on Russia’s Kola Peninsula.
They wanted to use this area because there were no cities anywhere near the site. They wanted to drill as deep as they could into the Earth. But how close would they get?

They wanted to get deeper than 49,000 feet underneath the ground. At least that was their initial goal.
They needed strong equipment suited for the job. They needed to get work done digging more boreholes that would fork off of the main shaft. But as the Americans made their own progress.

Lone Star, an American company, was drilling oil in Washita County in Oklahoma in 1974.
During the process of getting oil, they drilled more than 31,000 feet underground which would be later called “Bertha Rogers hole”. They ended up drilling more than 6 miles into the planet’s surface.

While the oil company didn’t find what it was searching for, the Bertha Rogers hole was the deepest hole for another five years.
On June 6, 1979, however, a Kola borehole known as SG-3, broke the standing record. While the hole was only nine inches wide, in 1983 the hole reached a groundbreaking 39,000 feet into the crust.

Upon reaching this remarkable milestone, the project on the Kola peninsula was stopped for a full 12 months. During this time, researchers on the Kola Peninsula paused their work and tourists could visit the site and see this marvel with their own eyes.
When the drilling started up again the following year, however, a technical problem caused the project to be stopped.

The researchers, however, refused to give up. They abandoned the hole and started a new hole from a depth of 23,000 feet.
By 1989 the hole had reached a staggering 40,230 feet, 7.5 miles. The team was excited and confident that by 1990 the hole would be more than 44,000 feet.

The team also predicted that by 1993 the hole would reach its 49,000-foot target. However, the further down the drill went, the more unexpected things became.
The drill slowly inched closer to Earth’s center, but, bizarrely, an unexpected change began to thwart the team. Something totally unexpected lurked beneath the Russian tundra, and it was about to make their mission a lot more difficult than they had initially anticipated…

During the drilling process, the temperatures encountered during the first 10,000 feet was as expected by the scientists.
However, as they went deeper, the temperature steadily increased. When the drilling began to near its target, the temperature reached 180 °C (356 °F). This was 80 °C (176 °F) more than expected. But that wasn’t all.

The rock at these depths also puzzled the scientists as they appeared to become less dense. This also meant that the rocks reacted differently under these conditions.
The team realized that their equipment wasn’t up to dealing with these unpredictable changes. So, the project was hastily abandoned in 1992, 22 years after it had started.

Researchers learned some fascinating things before the Kola Superdeep Borehole was sealed up. One example of this is tiny fossils of marine plants that were found four miles below the surface.
As surprising as it that they were intact, the depth at which they were found was dated to being more than two billion years old. But, another exciting discovery was about to reveal itself…

At the farthest reaches of the Kola Superdeep Borehole, researchers and scientists had measured seismic waves and predicted that the rock underneath Earth’s surface gradually changes from granite to basalt at around two to four miles beneath our feet.
However, experts were blindsided when they learned that this wasn’t the case at all — or at least not on the Kola Peninsula.

Imagine the researcher’s surprise when they only found granite — even in the deepest depths of the massive borehole. After careful study, they tried to explain that the change that they had detected in the seismic waves was actually due to metamorphic differences in the rock.
But they were so very wrong. And, to add more confusion, they also discovered flowing water miles beneath the earth — something that nobody had predicted.

While some groups immediately tried to explain the newly-discovered subterranean water as proof of the floods in the Bible, scientists have their own theory.
Researchers believe that this strange phenomenon is due to massive pressure forcing oxygen and hydrogen atoms out of the rock. After the atoms had been squeezed out, impermeable rocks trapped the water beneath the surface.

Coincidently, the closure of the Kola Superdeep Borehole coincides with the fall of the Soviet Union. By 1995, the ambitious project was shut down permanently.
Although tourists can still see the remnants of the experiment in the nearby town of Zapolyarny, the site has been declared an environmental hazard. Impressively, the borehole remains the deepest man-made hole. Other researchers have yet to beat its record. But, the race to the center of the Earth isn’t over yet…

Drilling platforms from the International Ocean Discovery Program continue to dig deeper into the sea floor. Researchers are still battling against seemingly insurmountable obstacles, such as failing equipment and extreme temperatures.
However, it is clear that there are many, many secrets just waiting to be uncovered. Who knows what will we find at the center of the Earth.
Other marks contained on this website are the property of their respective owners. Top5 is an independent comparison and review website may contain references to products from one or more of Top5 advertisers. Top5 is a free to use website is supported through compensation when you click on links to products. Please read our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use .
This website is not intended to provide medical advice or to take the place of medical advice and treatment from your personal physician. Visitors are advised to consult their own doctors or other qualified health professional regarding the treatment of medical conditions. The author shall not be held liable or responsible for any misunderstanding or misuse of the information contained on this site or for any loss, damage, or injury caused, or alleged to be caused, directly or indirectly by any treatment, action, or application of any food or food source discussed in this website. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration have not evaluated the statements on this website. The information is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.

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As much as humankind loves exploring the universe, we love exploring what’s beneath the oceans, although not quite as passionately. Thirdly, we also love digging holes on Earth, figuring out what exactly is located at extreme depths.
Throughout history, humankind has drilled holes in the ground for different reasons.
Sometimes in the name of science, sometimes in the name of money, but whatever the reason was, we really dug some massive holes in the Earth. But we also found that mother nature is good at creating them too.
In this article, we take a look at some of the deepest holes on Earth.
Located in Belize, the Great Blue hole is a unique tourist attraction. The monstrous hole is actually a sinkhole located just off the coast of Belize. The Great Blue hole was recently explored and stretched around 984 feet across and is about 410 feet deep.
Located in Canada, the Diavik Mine is owned by the Dominion Diamond Corporation. The mine holds the title of being Canada’s largest diamond mine in terms of production. According to reports, the mine is 600 feet deep, is also one of the deepest holes in the world.
Another mine. Another Diamond Mine, and another Massive one at that. The Kimberly Diamond Mine. Located in South Africa, it holds the title of the world’s largest hand-dug hole. Around 50,000 miners dug it. It was officially opened in 1871 and closed in 1914. The massive hole that resulted from the mine is nearly 800 feet deep.
You guessed it. Another Diamond Mine. This one is located in Russia and is one of the largest diamond mines opened in the USSR. The mine is no longer in operation. It is more than 1,700 feet deep and has a diameter of around 3,900 feet. The Mirny Diamond Mine holds the title as the second largest hole excavated on Earth and the fourth deepest open-pit mine.
From diamond mines, we jump to copper mines. Located in Utah, the Bingham Canyon mine is more than 100 years old. It is considered the largest manufactured excavation. The mine has been in production since 1906 and has resulted in the creation of a pit over 0.6 miles (970 m) deep, 2.5 miles (4 km) wide, and covering 1,900 acres (3.0 sq mi; 7.7 km 2 ). The mine dips down around 3,200 feet.
Located in Chile, the mine, better known as Chuqui, is believed to produce the most copper in the world. At around 2,800 feet deep, it’s one of the largest holes ever dug into the Earth.
Another massive copper mine. The Berkley Pit in Montana is around 1700 feet deep. It was closed in 1982. Since then, the mine has been filled with more than 900 feet worth of groundwater and rainwater.
From Montana, we travel back to Russia to take a look at the Udachnaya Pipe Mine. Located in western Yakutia, the massive mine stretches 5,249 by 6,561 feet, and it is 2,099 feet deep.
From man-made mines and holes, we return to those created by mother nature. Known as the door to hell, the Darzava Cater is a sinkhole that rightfully holds the title as one of the most unique holes in the world: its constantly on fire. Four decades ago, Soviet scientists set fire to gasses during a drilling project. Ever since the sinkhole has continued burning, it is around 230 feet wide and 100 feet deep.
We travel to Antarctica to see a massive hole that took more than seven years to drill. IceCube consists of spherical optical sensors called Digital Optical Modules (DOMs), each with a photomultiplier tube (PMT0) and a single-board data acquisition computer that sends digital data to the counting-house on the surface above the array. DOMs are deployed on strings of 60 modules, each at depths between 1,450 to 2,450 meters into holes melted in the ice using a hot-water drill.
With only around 9 inches in diameter, the Kola Superdeep Borehole has a mind-bending depth of 39,600 feet. The massive super hole stretches a staggering 7.5 miles into the Earth and is considered the second longest borehole ever created. The project began in 1970 and was abandoned in 2008 after reaching a depth where drilling was impossible to continue. The Kola Superdeep Borehole is deeper than the deepest part of the ocean. In terms of depth below the surface, the Kola Superdeep Borehole SG-3 retains the world record at 12,262 meters (40,230 ft) in 1989 and is still the deepest artificial point on Earth.
Considered the world’s longest extended-reach well offshore, the Z-44 Chayvo well is located on the Russian island of Sakhalin. On 27 August 2012, Exxon N
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