>>412674
Project Mohole drilled roughly 6 miles deep to the mantle which is above 100 degrees Celsius. How could liquid water be below that? Also, how did people drill down 400 miles to find it?
This sounds like more flat earth stuff. No facts, lots of imagination.
Is there at least a second independent source of info?
Note that if it is true that another planet hit earth and tore off a chunk, and if it is true that the Pacific Ocean now covers the wound, then the drilling into the Pacific Crust might not be representative of the rest of the planet.
However if this is really what happened I would expect that some autists could examine the Pacific Rim geology and the pattern of folds in the crust to detect some evidence of another body taking a swipe at the planet. There would be directional artefacts in the remaining rocks. Has anyone ever published such evidence?
Back in WWII when Stalin realized that Hitler had double-crossed him, he gave the NKVD complete freedom of action. The only proviso, they had to be right. There were severe punishments for lying, believing the lies of agents, etc.
So the NKVD honed their techniques. They ceased to believe anybody based on their reputation and authority. Every fact had to be verified by at least one other independent source. It worked, they got control, rooted out lots of double agents, acted mostly on true intelligence and singlehandedly won the war with Nazi Germany. Those techniques were passed on to the KGB who was stunningly effective in first infiltrating and then taking control of the USA. Too bad the Soviet Union and the Central KGB Command disappeared before the takeover was completed.
We need to learn that fundamental lesson that the NKVD learned. No matter how evil your enemy is, no matter how pure a track record your information source is, nothing is a fact until it has TWO (or more) INDEPENDENT sources. That means each source must be verified itself to be sure that 2 sources only appear to be independent but are actually acting together, either purposely or through circumstance.