The initial contract between the
National Science Foundation (NSF) and the
Regents of the University of California was signed on June 24, 1966. This contract initiated the first phase of the DSDP, which was based in
Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the
University of California, San Diego. Global Marine, Inc. conducted the drilling operations. The Levingston Shipbuilding Company laid the keel of the
Glomar Challenger on October 18, 1967, in
Orange, Texas. It sailed down the
Sabine River to the
Gulf of Mexico, and after a period of testing, DSDP accepted the ship on August 11, 1968. Through contracts with Joint Oceanographic Institutions (JOI), NSF supported the scientific advisory structure for the project and funded pre-drilling geophysical site surveys. Scientific planning was conducted under the auspices of the
Joint Oceanographic Institutions for Deep Earth Sampling (JOIDES). The JOIDES advisory group consisted of 250 distinguished scientists from academic institutions, government agencies, and private industry from all over the world. Over the next 30 months, the second phase consisted of drilling and coring in the
Atlantic,
Pacific, and
Indian Ocean as well as the
Mediterranean and
Red Sea. Technical and scientific reports followed during the period. The second phase of DSDP ended on August 11, 1972. The success of the
Glomar Challenger was almost immediate. On one of the sites with a water depth of ,
core samples revealed the existence of
salt domes. Oil companies received samples after an agreement to publish their analysis. The potential of oil beneath deep ocean salt domes remains an important avenue for commercial development today. This confirmation of
Alfred Wegener's
theory of continental drift strengthened the proposal of a single, ancient land mass, which is called
Pangaea. The samples gave further evidence to support the
plate tectonics theory, which at the time attempted to explain the formation of mountain ranges, earthquakes, and
oceanic trenches. Another discovery was how youthful the
ocean floor is in comparison to Earth's geologic history. After analysis of samples, scientists concluded that the ocean floor is probably no older than 200 million years. The Glomar Challenger docked for the last time with DSDP in November 1983. Parts of the ship, such as its dynamic positioning system, engine telegraph, and thruster console, are stored at the
Smithsonian Institution in
Washington, D.C. With the advent of larger and more advanced drilling ships, the
JOIDES Resolution replaced the
Glomar Challenger in January 1985. The new program, called the
Ocean Drilling Program (ODP), continued exploration from 1985 to 2003, at which point it was replaced by the
Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP). ==Coring operations==