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The New Zealand Herald
TechScience & Research

Scientific expedition reveals secrets of lost continent Zealandia

More than 8000 specimens from hundreds of fossil species identified through ocean drilling

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Expedition co-leader Professor Rupert Sutherland speaks with media in front of the JOIDES Resolution research vessel in Hobart, Tasmania. Photo: Supplied
The New Zealand Herald

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.

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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.

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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.

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