Boring is drilling a hole, tunnel, or well in the
earth.
Earth
boring
Boring is used for a wide variety of
applications in geology, agriculture, hydrology, civil engineering, and oil and natural gas industries. Today, most earth
drilling is done in order to do one of the following things:
- return samples of the rock through which the drill passes
- access rocks from which material can be extracted
- access rocks which can then be measured
- provide access to rock for purposes of providing engineering support
When drilling in stone, one must pay particular attention to the type of material. There are three different classifications of drill bits used for drilling into stone: soft, medium, and hard. Soft formation rock bits are used in unconsolidated sands, clays, and soft limestones, etc. Medium formation bits are used in dolomites, limestones, and shale, while hard formation bits are used in hard shale, mudstones, granite, limestones and other hard and/or abrasive formations.
Soft ground drilling can be undertaken using a rotary auger or wash boring techniques, while rock drilling often use methods such as NMLC which allow for recovery of a core of material which can be examined to determine the strength, degree of weathering, understanding of any how intact the rock is (RQD) and identify any discontinuities or other planes of weakness.
Testing of the material in boreholes is also possible. In soft ground the standard penetration test can be used to determine the strength of the material. In rock in-situ stress testing using hydrofracturing or overcoring, Acoustic Televiewer can be used to map discontinuities to determine their orientation. It is also possible once a borehole is complete to measure the permeability. Samples of water and material are also taken for examination and lab testing.
The Kola Superdeep Borehole
In the 1970s and early 1980s the
USSR attempted to drill a hole through the crust, to sample the Mohorovicic
Discontinuity. The
deepest hole ever drilled failed not because of lack of money or time, but
because of the physics of rocks within the crust. The hole
achieved approximately 12,000 metres depth, a depth at which rock begins to act
more like a plastic solid than a rigid solid. The rock also
approached temperatures of several hundred degrees Celsius, requiring that the drilling fluid be refrigerated before being sent to the cutting face of
the drill. As the drill bits burnt out and were removed for replacement, the
hole simply flowed closed, and the rock had to be re-drilled. Due to the
temperature, the drill bits burnt out before achieving any headway. The hole
was scrapped.Further attempts at super-deep drillholes are planned by American consortia and further Russian attempts in Finland.
Ice boring
Ice cores are drilled by hollow bits, in much the
same way that sediment cores are drilled. When all that is needed is the hole,
hot water drill technology may be used to melt holes in ice or snow for both
Arctic and Antarctic research purposes. Equipment for such a method is also
lightweight when drilling deep holes, compared to traditional drilling
equipment. Hot water drilling has been used successfully in the IceCube
Neutrino Detector and Antarctic Muon And Neutrino Detector Array projects to drill as deep as 2,450
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