{"id":45,"date":"2014-05-27T14:26:23","date_gmt":"2014-05-27T14:26:23","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blog.ldeo.columbia.edu\/2013report\/?page_id=45"},"modified":"2014-07-02T15:44:26","modified_gmt":"2014-07-02T15:44:26","slug":"a-unique-resource-for-understanding-earths-history-and-processes","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/blog.ldeo.columbia.edu\/2013report\/research\/a-unique-resource-for-understanding-earths-history-and-processes\/","title":{"rendered":"A Unique Resource for Understanding Earth\u2019s History and Processes"},"content":{"rendered":"

Lamont\u2019s founder, Maurice \u201cDoc\u201d Ewing, had a vision for studying Earth\u2019s past through sediments on the ocean floor. It came down to four words: \u201cA core a day.\u201d Starting in the late 1940s, wherever a Lamont research ship happened to be, Ewing or his scientists stopped at least once a day to extract a fresh column of mud. Ewing even invented a device, the Ewing Piston Corer, to make the coring work easier.<\/p>\n

Due in part to Ewing\u2019s foresight, the Lamont-Doherty Core Repository today houses the world\u2019s largest collection of deep-sea sediment cores\u2014some 19,000 tubes of mud spanning 100 million years. Like pages in a book, the cores provide a record of Earth\u2019s deep past.<\/p>\n