Scientific expedition reveals secrets of lost continent Zealandia
More than 8000 specimens from hundreds of fossil species identified through ocean drilling

By Jamie Morton
Zealandia, the “lost” continent New Zealand lies upon, was much closer to land level than previously believed - and shallow enough to offer pathways for animals and plants to move along.
A major international expedition, which involved drilling deep into the seabed, has transformed what we understand about the submerged continent’s intriguing 70-million-year-old history.
This year Zealandia was confirmed as Earth’s seventh continent, but little is known about it because most is submerged more than a kilometre beneath the ocean and the region has been sparsely surveyed and sampled.
Scientists with the 23-nation Integrated Ocean Drilling Programme (IODP), aboard the research vessel JOIDES Resolution, drilled deep into the seabed at six sites at water depths between 1250 metres and 4850 metres.
From the seabed, they collected about 2500 metres of sediment cores from layers that record how the geography, volcanism, and climate of Zealandia changed during the past 70 million years.