How Did That Get There?

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Not really a lot for me to say about the bailout package, but I stumbled on this funny sentence in the NYTimes:
Overnight (well, overnight for my time zone), I received an email, beseeching me to submit a story or two to the carnival of evolution.
A twelve year old boarder collie mix survived being frozen to the sidewalk for a whole night in Wisconsin. The overnight temperature dropped into the single digits, yet the elderly animal survived. How?
If it was an overnight success, it was one long, hard, sleepless night. - Dicky Barrett

Is this the one where they build a vessel of "unobtanium", enter the oozing mantle, and bore to the core?

By Mustafa Mond, FCD (not verified) on 05 Mar 2007 #permalink

Very cool - I had no idea such a hole existed. My only concern is that since the hole "defies conventional tectonic plate theories" it's just a matter of time until we hear something from the religious right along the lines of "See, scientists can't explain a giant hole in the earth. Clearly, all of geology is a crock and the Earth can't possibly be more than 6,000 yrs old." sigh.

Maybe the creationists will say that the mantle in the hole is the drain plug where all the flood waters went.

By natural cynic (not verified) on 05 Mar 2007 #permalink

They're slighly hyping this, I think - it's not so much a 'hole' as 'stuff (mantle rocks) on the surface which is normally beneath something else (oceanic crust)', and although we're not really sure why that happens, this isn't the first time we've seen such a thing. The stories I've read are very vague on details, but I'd guess that it's associated with a fracture zone on the ridge, where the crust is always quite thin anyway.

Chris,
In researching the article I found surprisingly little, published papers or press releases, that gave more information. A diagram would have been nice. My take is similar to yours that it is not hole such much as a bare spot.