Drilling Projects By
World
Geological Time
Climate & Ecosystems
Sustainable Georesources
Natural Hazards
Europe
- Map of Europe
- Alpine Valleys
- Are-Jarpen (Sweden)
- Campi Flegrei (Italy)
- Central Apennines (Italy)
- Corinth (Greece)
- Crete (Greece)
- Dead Sea (Israel)
- Eger (Czechia, Germany)
- Erzgebirge (Germany)
- Fennoscandia (Sweden)
- Gibraltar/Spain
- Iceland
- Imandra (Russia)
- Ivrea (Italy)
- Kola (Russia)
- Krafla (Iceland)
- Krafla Magma Testbed (KMT)
- KTB
- KTBTL
- KTB-Hydraulic
- Lake Ohrid (Macedonia)
- Lake Van (Turkey)
- Limfjorden (Denmark)
- Mjoelnir (Norway)
- North Anatolian Fault (Turkey)
- North Sea (Netherlands)
- Northern Apennines (Italy)
- Orava (Poland)
- Outokumpu (Finland)
- Paris Basin (France)
- Prees (England)
- Surtsey (Iceland)
- Windischeschenbach (Germany)
Outokumpu Deep Drilling Project
and Geolaboratory
The basic operations of the project included drilling the hole to 2.5 km depth with continuous coring, geophysical loggings using 20 different methods, as well as hydrogeological sampling and hydraulic permeability measurements.
The Outokumpu Deep Geolaboratory: the borehole is open for national and international use as a deep laboratory facility for different short and long-period experiments to be carried out in the borehole.
