Holes

(xkcd.com)

204 points | by caminanteblanco 12 hours ago ago

36 comments

  • letmevoteplease 9 hours ago ago
  • dvh 8 hours ago ago

    Hover text is "If you're thinking 'Wait, a giant crystal cave in Mexico? What's that?' then I'm SO excited for the image search you're about to do."

  • ozyschmozy 32 minutes ago ago

    Funny that he misspelled one (derinku_y_u, literally meaning deep well), given all the effort that clearly went into it.

  • sheepybloke 2 hours ago ago

    It's funny this came out today! Just at lunch we were googling the highest and lowest capitals of the world. Lowest is Baku in Azerbaijan, at -28m!

  • WithinReason 9 hours ago ago

    Lake Baikal sediment layer almost as deep as the Mariana Trench:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lake_Baikal#Geography_and_hydr...

    [...] and below this lies some 7 km (4.3 mi) of sediment, placing the rift floor some 8–11 km (5.0–6.8 mi) below the surface, the deepest continental rift on Earth.

  • halamadrid 11 hours ago ago

    What are all those oops for?

  • cbarrick 9 hours ago ago

    Explain xkcd has links to the Wikipedia articles for each hole.

    https://www.explainxkcd.com/wiki/index.php/3266:_Holes

    • ks2048 8 hours ago ago

      Site down?

      The Wikipedia page on borehole doesn’t mention Deep Water Horizon at all.

      • ks2048 8 hours ago ago

        And Wikipedia says this one is over 12,000m deep,

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al_Shaheen_Oil_Field

        • aw1621107 8 hours ago ago

          The >12km number is length, not depth:

          > However, in May 2008, a new record for borehole length was established by the extended-reach drilling (ERD) well BD-04A, in the Al Shaheen oil field. It was drilled to 12,289 m (40,318 ft), with a record horizontal reach of 10,902 m (35,768 ft) in only 36 days.

    • AviationAtom 8 hours ago ago

      Y'all done hugged it to death

      • B1FF_PSUVM 8 hours ago ago

        It was erroring out 12h ago.

  • Avicebron 10 hours ago ago

    I forget how cool Lake Baikal is until it shows up randomly and I'm reminded to go look it up again.

  • thunderbong 3 hours ago ago

    XKCD always has a mobile version. You need add a m. prefix -

    https://m.xkcd.com/3266/

    Helps to see the alt-text if you're on a phone.

    • saretup 3 hours ago ago

      Looks pretty blurred

  • neilv 9 hours ago ago

    What's at 12,000 meters deep? What are they afraid of?

    • rolfus 8 hours ago ago

      There's a documentary about that, in the form of the game 'Motherload'

      https://www.crazygames.com/game/motherload

      • rationalist 8 hours ago ago

        I played that game way back when - I highly recommend it.

        Edit: thanks, that's an(other) hour of my life I'll never get back :-)

    • tialaramex 7 hours ago ago

      Nothing of great interest. That's a tiny scratch in the surface of the planet, less than 1% of the radius.

      On the other hand although we lack the technology you'd need to destroy the damp rock where we live, we only live on some dry-ish outside surface parts of the rock, and we could trash that part and drive ourselves extinct. "Oops"

      • geor9e 6 hours ago ago

        They were asking why the two deepest holes, despite being nowhere near each other, dug decades apart, are 99.3% of 12km and 99.5% of 12km respectively. Was BP symbolically honoring the russian scientists? Does the earth have an extremely uniform material property that happens to be at a very round number of km? Just a complete coincidence all around?

        (I asked AI, and it says coincidence, since BP stopped drilling once they hit oil, and the russians stopped drilling once they hit some melty rock.)

    • zokier 8 hours ago ago

      conveniently there is a xkcd for that too https://xkcd.com/1330/

  • lambdaone 10 hours ago ago

    I had never heard of Mponeng Gold Mine. Terrifying.

    • jadbox 10 hours ago ago

      Did you not scroll over to see the even more massive Kola Superdeep Borehole?

  • js2 4 hours ago ago

    Can we update the link to https://xkcd.com/3266/

    Anyone who wants the large image can click/tap the image, but the revere is harder to do.

    In the other direction, Mt. Everest is 8,848.86 meters above sea level. I guess we don't include Lake Tahoe and/or Crater Lake because even though they're deep(ish), their bottoms are above way sea level?

  • underlipton 7 hours ago ago

    You cannot convince me that something ridiculous wasn't covered up wrt Deepwater Horizon.