and

they had to chance their

Ww

in a hole

ty

estimation about the thickness of the coral, which meant sore

rr

convinced they were

214

their conce pt about how the moon was forred,

change about the age of the earth, which meant sore change of

w

_PREMONT-SMITH:

[Laughter]

And this went on until

on

Yes!

they finally reached a fantastic depth of about 1200 feet

wow

om

DONALDSON:

And that includes the tides,

thick the coral cap might be.

10

out of food and we were running out of drinking liquor, which

11

everybody worried about because the supply vessels were bring-

12

ing mud to grease this hole that they were drilling down into

13

the atoll.

and they still hadn't found out how old the earth was nor how
By this time we were running

“y
.

The following year they moved over to Eniwetok and

15

began to drill there and the element drilling went down toa

4

14
16

total of som 4300 feet before they came to the basal strata

17

on which the coral was anchored.

18

FREMONT-SMITH: They did find it there?

19

DONALDSON:

20
21

Yes.

They actually found that there was

a bottom to this boundless pile of calcium carbouate,

a

The illustration I hope is not wasted.

But it's

22

indicative of som of the needs to know in the netural environ-

23

ment in which we are working.

ou

the seas are so imperfectly known that we son@tires find such

25

great gaps in our thinking because we don't have the physical

26

and biological paraneters upon which to work.

27

ment of the Senior Senator from our State who repeatedly has

28

made the statement that we know a great deal more about the

29

back side of the moon than we do about the oceans that cover

30

72 per cent of the earth's surface,

31

background maybe we can be a bit more spécific in the things

32

that we are going to te talking about,

33

The seas and the =:tolls within

Like the state-

Well, with this as a

The tests were conducted, as I nentioned, at these

Stafford Warren

DOE/UCLA co

hd ees

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