The topic is geological prospecting whose aim is to find deposits of useful minerals under the Earth without digging a pit or sinking a shaft.

There exist several methods of determining the acceleration of free fall very accurately. It is possible to find
A pendulum is used for the same purposes. Not very long ago pendulum methods of measuring
Measuring values of
Measuring the value of
But what is the norm for the value of
There are two natural changes which have long been observed and are well known to researchers in the value of the acceleration of free fallon the Earth’s surface.
First of all,
The second change in
Therefore, at one and the same latitude and at one and the same height above sea level, the acceleration of free fall should be identical.
Accurate measurements show that deviations from this norm—gravitational anomalies—are found quite often. The cause of an anomaly consists in the heterogeneity of the mass distribution near the place of measurement.
As we explained, the gravitational force due to a large body can be conceptually represented as the sum of forces emanating from the individual particles of the large body. The attraction of a pendulum to the Earth is the result of the action of all the particles of the Earth on it. But it is clear that the nearby particles make the greatest contribution to the resultant force, for the attraction is inversely proportional to the square of the distance.
If heavy masses are concentrated near the place of measurement,
If, for example, we measure
Not only the value of
Imagine that you are performing experiments with a plumb-line at the foot of a large mountain. The load of the plumb-line is attracted by the Earth towards its centre, and by the mountain to one side. Under such conditions, the plumb-line must be deflected from the direction of a normal vertical (Figure 2). Since the Earth’s mass is much greater than that of the mountain, such a deflection will not exceed several seconds of arc. Plumb-line deflections sometimes yield strange results. For example, in Florence the influence of the Appenines leads not to an attraction, but to a repulsion of a plumb-line. The explanation can only be as follows: there are enormous empty spaces in mountains.

Measurements of the acceleration of free fall to the scale of continents and oceans yield remarkable results. Continents are considerably heavier than oceans; therefore, it would seem that the values of
But the following question immediately arises: Why do heavy and light bedrocks compensate so exactly for the difference in weight between continents and oceans? Such a compensation cannot be a matter of chance; its cause must be rooted in the construction of the Earth’s shell.
Geologists assume that it is as though the upper layers of the Earth’s shell were floating on an underlying plastic (i.e. easily deformed like wet clay) mass. The pressure at depths of about
This levelling of pressures (it is called isostasy) is just what leads to the situation where along a single latitude over oceans and continents the values of the acceleration of free fall
Local gravitational anomalies serve us just as the magic wand, which banged on the ground where there was gold or silver, served little Mook in Hauf’s fairy-tale.
One must look for heavy ore in those places where
Prospecting with the aid of pendulums and super-exact scales is called gravitational. It is of great practical value, in particular when looking for oil. The fact is that with gravitational prospecting, it is easy to discover underground salt domes. It so happens that often oil is found at those places too. Moreover, the oil lies at some depth, while the salt is nearer to the Earth’s surface. Oil was discovered in Kazakhstan and in other places by gravitational prospecting.