Let's suppose, just for sake of argument that you had a drill capable of plowing below where you are standing right now and grinding its way straight through the middle of the planet to the other side. Where would you end up?
Surf on the Google map below, find where you want to dig your hole and click there. After this, click on "Start Digging..." and you will see the place where you going to end up.
Scientifically speaking it would be impossible to dig a tunnel through to the other side of the world, but it's fun to pretend! If you attempted to dig a hole to the other side of the Earth, you would be digging through:
» More than 12 000 kilometres of solid rock and molten magma
» Rock reaching temperatures up to 6000 ºC and
» Extreme pressures up to 300 million times greater than the pressures we experience on the surface of the Earth!
Also, the Earth is not a perfect sphere. It is slightly flattened at the poles, and bulges a little at the equator due to the Earth's spin. So technically, if you dig a tunnel through to the other side of the globe, you would not come out at the place shown on a Google Map which is an almost perfect sphere.
If you did somehow manage to dig a hole to the other side of the Earth, would you fall through?
Again, theoretically no! The Earth continues to spin as you fall, gravity changes as you fall to the Earth's centre and friction would slow you down. If you ignored all of these factors, scientists think it would take about 42 minutes to fall through the tunnel.
If you dig a hole deep enough, you will eventually reach the Earth's mantle, which is extremely hot and made of solid rock. It is impossible to dig through the entire Earth due to its immense size and the limitations of current technology.
No, it is not possible to dig directly through the Earth. The immense heat and pressure in the Earth's interior would make it impossible for any digging equipment or tunnel to survive.
The Earth's diameter is 7926.28 miles at the equator and 7899.8 miles at the poles.
No, it is not possible to dig through the Earth's center to the other side. The extremely high temperatures and pressures in the Earth's core would make it impossible for any human or machine to survive the journey.
No, it is not possible to dig through the Earth's core as it is made up of extremely hot and molten materials that would make any attempt to withstand its heat impossible. Additionally, the gravity at the Earth's core is likely to be much stronger and escaping it would not be feasible.
if you dig a hole through Federalsburg, Delaware it would end up in the sea south west of Australia. (Latitude:-38.6833657775237 Longitude:104.51019287109375)
Magma and lava would fill in the hole, for one thing.
If you dig a hole deep enough, you will eventually reach the Earth's mantle, which is extremely hot and made of solid rock. It is impossible to dig through the entire Earth due to its immense size and the limitations of current technology.
No
dig a really big hole then get out in jump back in then dig another hole
You would never come out. The Earths core temperature would destroy any implement. Any magma disturbed would fill in any hole, and the Earths gravity would not allow any progress away from the core.
Perhaps you have imagined digging a tunnel through the earth that comes out the other side. How many kilometers would you have to dig?
-oil -soil -water
its impossible to dig a half a hole, its either you dig a hole or ya dont.
The mantle
it isn't possible.
the diameter of the earth is 12760KMs You would come up near Borden, Western Australia.