Exploration of the mantle is generally conducted at the seabed rather than on land because of the relative thinness of the oceanic crust as compared to the significantly thicker continental crust. The first attempt at mantle exploration, known as
Project Mohole, was abandoned in 1966 after repeated failures and cost over-runs. The deepest penetration was approximately . In 2005 an oceanic borehole reached below the sea floor from the ocean drilling vessel
JOIDES Resolution. More successful was the
Deep Sea Drilling Project (DSDP) that operated from 1968 to 1983. Coordinated by
Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the
University of California, San Diego, DSDP provided crucial data to support the
seafloor spreading hypothesis and helped to prove the theory of
plate tectonics.
Glomar Challenger conducted the drilling operations. DSDP was the first of three international scientific ocean drilling programs that have operated over more than 40 years. Scientific planning was conducted under the auspices of the
Joint Oceanographic Institutions for Deep Earth Sampling (JOIDES), whose advisory group consisted of 250 distinguished scientists from academic institutions, government agencies, and private industry from all over the world. The
Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) continued exploration from 1985 to 2003 when it was replaced by the
Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP). On 5 March 2007, a team of scientists on board the
RRS James Cook embarked on a voyage to an area of the
Mid-Atlantic Ridge where the mantle lies exposed without any crust covering, midway between the
Cape Verde Islands and the
Caribbean Sea. The exposed site lies approximately three kilometres beneath the ocean surface and covers thousands of square kilometres. A relatively difficult attempt to retrieve samples from the Earth's mantle was scheduled for later in 2007. The Chikyu Hakken mission attempted to use the Japanese vessel
Chikyū to drill up to below the seabed. This is nearly three times as deep as preceding
oceanic drillings. A novel method of exploring the uppermost few hundred kilometres of the Earth was proposed in 2005, consisting of a small, dense, heat-generating probe which melts its way down through the crust and mantle while its position and progress are tracked by acoustic signals generated in the rocks. The probe consists of an outer sphere of
tungsten about one metre in diameter with a
cobalt-60 interior acting as a radioactive heat source. It was calculated that such a probe will reach the oceanic
Moho in less than 6 months and attain minimum depths of well over in a few decades beneath both
oceanic and
continental lithosphere. Exploration can also be aided through computer simulations of the evolution of the mantle. In 2009, a
supercomputer application provided new insight into the distribution of mineral deposits, especially
isotopes of iron, from when the mantle developed 4.5 billion years ago. In 2023, JOIDES Resolution recovered cores of what appeared to be rock from the upper mantle after drilling only a few hundred meters into the
Atlantis Massif. The borehole reached a maximum depth of 1,268 meters and recovered 886 meters of rock samples consisting of primarily
peridotite. There is debate over the extent to which the samples represent the upper mantle with some arguing the effects of seawater on the samples situates them as examples of deep lower crust. However, the samples offer a much closer analogue to mantle rock than magmatic
xenoliths as the sampled rock never melted into magma or recrystallized. ==See also==