3266: Holes

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Holes
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.
Title text: 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.

Explanation[edit]

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This page was created recently, using the power of New Mexican crystals, and found in a hole. Don't remove this notice too soon. If you can fix this issue, edit the page!


Feature Type Approx. elevation/depth Notes More information
Bingham Canyon Mine Open-pit copper mine ~+2 km Utah, USA One of the world's largest human-made excavations, over 1 km deep and several kilometers across.
Veryovkina Cave Cave ~−2.2 km Georgia (Abkhazia) Currently the deepest known cave on Earth, explored to more than 2.2 km below its entrance.
Giant Crystal Cave Cave ~+1 km Naica Mine, Mexico Famous for enormous gypsum crystals, some over 10 m (33 ft) long, formed in hot mineral-rich groundwater.
Derinkuyu Underground City Underground city ~+1.5 km Turkey Ancient underground city capable of sheltering tens of thousands of people and their livestock.
WIPP Nuclear waste repository ~+0.6 km New Mexico, USA The Waste Isolation Pilot Plant stores long-lived radioactive waste in a stable underground salt formation.
Sanford Laboratory Underground laboratory ~−1.5 km South Dakota, USA Former Homestake Gold Mine, now used for experiments in particle physics, neutrinos, and dark matter.
Restof [Retsof] Salt Mine Salt mine ~−0.6 km New York, USA Once the largest salt mine in the United States before major flooding in the 1990s.
Mponeng Gold Mine Gold mine ~−4 km South Africa Among the deepest operating mines ever built, reaching nearly 4 km below the surface.
Jinping Laboratory Underground laboratory ~+1.6 km China Built beneath Jinping Mountain and protected by over 2 km of rock, making it one of the world's deepest underground laboratories.
San Andreas Fault Observatory Borehole Geological scientific borehole ~+0.6 km California, USA Aimed at collecting geological data about the San Andreas Fault for the purpose of predicting and analyzing future earthquakes.
CFB North Bay Military bunker ~+0.3 km Ontario, Canada Cold War command center carved into solid rock for North American air defense.
Diefenbunker Military bunker Near sea level Canada Massive four-story underground bunker built to house the Canadian government after a nuclear attack.
Woodingdean Water Well Well ~−0.4 km United Kingdom Hand-dug in the 19th century and still the deepest hand-excavated well ever completed.
Deep Underground Command Center Proposed military bunker ~−1 km Nevada, USA A proposed U.S. command facility that was never constructed after extensive planning.
Lake Peigneur Lake ~−0.2 km Louisiana, USA Famous for a 1980 drilling accident that transformed a shallow freshwater lake into a much deeper saltwater lake.
Sydney Opera House Parking Parking garage Slightly below sea level Australia Deep underground parking beneath one of Australia's most recognizable landmarks.
Onkalo Spent Nuclear Fuel Repository Nuclear waste repository ~−0.4 km Finland Designed for permanent disposal of spent nuclear fuel for over 100,000 years.
Raven Rock Military bunker Near surface Pennsylvania, USA Alternate U.S. military command center, sometimes called the "Underground Pentagon."
Delaware Aqueduct Water tunnel ~−0.3 km New York, USA The world's longest water tunnel, supplying drinking water to New York City.
Wieliczka and Bochnia Salt Mines Salt mines ~−0.3 km Poland Historic medieval mines famous for underground chapels, sculptures, and vast chambers carved from salt.
Atchison Storage Facility Underground storage Near surface Kansas, USA A former limestone mine converted into climate-controlled storage for records, film, and valuables.
Detroit Salt Mine Salt mine ~−0.35 km Michigan, USA Extensive salt mine directly beneath downtown Detroit and the Detroit River.
SNOLAB Underground laboratory ~−2 km Ontario, Canada Located inside an active mine and used for dark matter, neutrino, and astroparticle physics experiments.
Hongyancun Subway Station Subway station Near surface Chongqing, China One of the deepest metro stations in the world due to the city's steep mountainous terrain.
Nuclear Test Shafts Test tunnels ~+1 km North Korea Underground tunnels used for nuclear weapons testing beneath Mount Mantap.
Super-Kamiokande Neutrino detector ~−1 km Japan Giant underground tank containing 50,000 tonnes of ultra-pure water used to detect neutrinos.
Gran Sasso Laboratory Underground laboratory ~+0.7 km Italy The world's largest underground research laboratory by volume.
Modane Laboratory Underground laboratory ~+1.5 km France Built beneath the Alps to shield sensitive physics experiments from cosmic rays.
Gotthard Tunnel Railway tunnel ~+0.6 km Switzerland The world's longest railway tunnel, stretching 57 km through the Alps.
Cheyenne Mountain Bunker Military bunker ~+1.5 km Colorado, USA Hardened military complex built inside a granite mountain to survive nuclear attack.
Lake Baikal Lake ~−1.6 km Russia The world's deepest and oldest freshwater lake, containing roughly 20% of Earth's unfrozen surface freshwater.
Sediments under Lake Baikal ~ Russia
Dead Sea Salt lake ~−0.4 km Israel/Palestine/Jordan Earth's lowest exposed land surface, famous for extremely salty water that allows people to float easily.
Ryfylke Tunnel Road tunnel ~−0.3 km Norway One of the world's deepest subsea road tunnels.
Great Blue Hole Marine sinkhole ~−0.1 km Belize A giant circular marine sinkhole popular with scuba divers and marine researchers.
Pantai Remis Mine Tin mine Near sea level Malaysia A flooded open-pit tin mine that eventually became a lake after its seawall collapsed.
JOIDES Resolution Expedition 307 Scientific ocean borehole ~−6 km Atlantic Ocean Ocean drilling expedition that cored deep into the seafloor to study Earth's geology and climate history.
Glomar Challenger hole 504B ~
Mariana Trench ~
Deepwater Horizon Borehole ~
Kola Superdeep Borehole ~
IDDP-2 Borehole ~

Transcript[edit]

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Discussion

thank god the site is back up again, that outage was scary. on a more relevant note, yay, another long data page! - Vaedez (talk) 02:43, 2 July 2026 (UTC)

Must have missed that (can see other references to it below). It was working before I went to bed (this wasn't here yet), but I'm guessing it's the same overzealous webscraping/watever (automated, either by hand or AI 'material grabber') that we had over a few days last month. Though must have started later and finished far earlier, this last session. 82.132.236.125 13:06, 2 July 2026 (UTC)
It couldn't cope with all the holes. 82.13.184.33 13:09, 2 July 2026 (UTC)

i'm here before the image! 216.25.182.141 03:59, 2 July 2026 (UTC)

yeah, that'll be due to an issue with the site/the bot that generally creates the comic pages (as mentioned in "created by a BOT") having trouble uploading to the site - Vaedez (talk) 04:39, 2 July 2026 (UTC)
okay, i think i uploaded the image correctly? its certainly in now, and i didn't touch how the image is embedded, but it looks maybe too big in the page - Vaedez (talk) 04:46, 2 July 2026 (UTC)

I'm a bit surprised that the Deepwater Horizon Bore Hole didn't get an "Oops" tag. 60.240.65.62

Is the deepwater horizon bore hole a joke? --2001:638:807:508:8FD3:E0DF:F738:D961 05:47, 2 July 2026 (UTC)

The russian hole got filled in again, they we're afraid of deamons. The deepest hole that ist still open is KTB in Windischeschenbach at 9101m [schobi]

Did nobody notice that Randal made a typo in the word bochnia? 217.95.141.233 05:18, 2 July 2026 (UTC)

Why does this site constantly go out? It's starting to concern me. RG (talk) 05:57, 2 July 2026 (UTC)

(See reply to first comment.) 82.132.236.125 13:06, 2 July 2026 (UTC)

Point the first: Surprised that CERN didn't get a look in. Not particularly deep, but then again some of the others aren't, and maybe even are also "far wider than deep". And CERN's 'underground ring(s)' hole is very much in Randall's awareness. Makes you wonder what other examples were deliberately left out. 82.132.236.125 13:06, 2 July 2026 (UTC)

Point the second: I think there needs to be two 'depth' columns in the table. The one currently there is (I think) all "(height above/)depth below MSL", but a second column for "maximum depth below the local surface" (or better description) might be useful. i.e. the mountaintops they're dug in below (even if tunnelled in from the side, it's the 'overhead' rock, not the 'shaft-depth', though notes about that might not go amiss). For the Dead Sea it is at its own surface (though its depths are at watery depths starting from that below-sealevel point). The oceanic ones would be depth below the (surrounding?) sea-floor. - I can trivially add in the whole column, right now (and set it up for proper useful datasortvalue, etc), but would have to leave it blank of data until I can actually do enough of the research. Rather than that, just mentioning it. Maybe someone else has the time, before I do (this evening, maybe?). 82.132.236.125 13:06, 2 July 2026 (UTC)

This is just what I just got edit conflicted while commenting. 82.13.184.33 13:07, 2 July 2026 (UTC)

Also a typo on Retsof (restof)

According to Wikipedia the Ryfylke Tunnel is not ONE of the deepest subsea road tunnels but THE deepest tunnel of any kind. It is expected to be surpassed by a tunnel planned to be completed in 2033 (also in Norway) 13:33, 2 July 2026 (UTC)
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