-
Random Facts
- Are there any good viruses like good bacteria and what are they called?
- Where Is the Center of Europe?
- How Old Is Tennis?
- How long is the groove on a CD?
- What Plant Has the Largest Seeds?
- What Is Amazing About Eels?
- What is the silver stuff in an Etch A Sketch and how does it work?
- Are Most Snakes Poisonous?
- Where Did the English Language Come From?
- Where Is the Longest Bridge in the World?
-
Recent Comments
- khari walker on Why Does Your Body Need Water?
- Az on How Is Paper Made?
- johnny on Who Invented Chewing Gum?
- yazeed on Can We Build Cities on the Moon?
- Sudheer on How Much Does the Earth Weigh?
- Asha on Who invented Money and why?
- Dr. Nancy Malik on Is there a difference between homeopathy and holistic medicine?
- loliipop on Who Invented Chewing Gum?
- Amy on When Did Books First Appear?
- Kayla on When was the first open-heart surgery performed and by whom?
Tags
-
Pages

What Is the Deepest Hole In The World?
In the 1980s, it was just over six miles deep, 31,911 feet, to be exact. This was a drill hole made on the Kola Peninsula in Russia by workers looking for oil.
This hole is 2,909 feet deeper than Mount Everest is high. The Russians are not alone in going to such depths to get oil. During the 1970s, two holes were drilled in Oklahoma, each over 30,000 feet deep.
Why do we dig so deep to find oil when coal lies so close to the surface of the earth? Products made from oil, such as gasoline and kerosene, are very efficient sources of energy.
If you were to burn equal weights of gasoline and the very finest anthracite coal, the gasoline would produce 50 percent more heat. It would produce 800 percent more heat than an equal weight of the soft coal that makes up most of the world’s supply.
When drilling for oil, natural gas is often found, and this is the most efficient of all the fuels found in the earth. It will produce almost twice the heat of anthracite coal and almost ten times the heat of soft coal.
The Deepest Hole in the world today is still the Kola well at the Kola Institute, on the Kola Peninsula, near the Norwegian border. The Russians drilling the Kola well since 1970 and have reached a crust depth of 40,226 feet, a record that’s never been broken.