Download Seafloor Features

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
The Ocean Floor
1
Description of
2
3
Atlantic Ocean
Continental Shelf
4
Typical Oceanic Profile
continental margin
ocean basin
coastal region
continental
shelf
oceanic
ridge
Slope
Abyssal plain
Depth > 4000 m
5
The Continental Margin
continental margin
coastal region
continental
shelf
ocean basin
shelf break
oceanic
ridge
Slope
Abyssal plain
continental
rise
> 4000 m
6
Continental Margin
Fig. 2-3a
7
Continental Shelf
8
Coastal Region
coastal
region
• Includes:
•beaches
•estuaries
• lagoons
• marshes
• deltas
Most important
region to humans
And marine birds
and mammals
9
Beaches
10
Typical Salt Marsh
11
Mangrove Swamp
12
Continental Shelf
continental margin
• Definition: shallow
part of ocean bottom
next to coastline
continental
shelf
Slope
continental
rise
• SLOPE is
less than 0.1° angle
13
Most exposed
in Pleistocene
14
Continental Slope and Rise
Slope
Continental
rise
• Slope
is 1° to 6°
• Rise:
less than 1°
• Slope & rise can be
cut by submarine
canyons
15
Overlapping
fans=cones
See Fig. 2-3a
16
San Lucas Submarine Canyon
2 meters
17
Typical Oceanic Profile
continental margin
ocean basin
shelf break
continental
shelf
oceanic
ridge
Slope
Abyssal plain
continental
rise
18
Ocean Basins
Are the deep flat areas of the ocean
19
Deep Ocean Basins
Fig. 2-3b
20
Seamounts and Guyots- undersea
mountains that rise more than 1 km from the seafloor
SEAMOUNT
Top is rounded
May rise above the surface
and form an island
GUYOT
Top flattened by
waves
21
3 Major Oceanic Ridges
Mid-Atlantic Ridge
E. Pacific
Rise
Carlsberg
Ridge
22
Characteristics of Oceanic Mountain
Ridges
• Total
length: 60,000 km
• Present
in all oceans
• Between
1,000 and 4,000 km wide
• mountains are 2
- 4 km high
•The largest is the Mid Atlantic Ridge half that
separatat
23
Mid-Ocean Ridges
Fig. 2-3c
24
Mid-Atlantic Ridge
Shallow valleys 20 - 30 km wide
with high volcanic activity
25
Oceanic Trenches
• 31
in the world;
• Deep;
U or V shaped
•These form the deepest places on Earth
• Max
130 km wide, 1500 km long
26
Distribution of Trenches
27
Kurile
10,500 m
Mariana
11,000 m
Tonga
10,880 m
3 _________ trenches
28
29
Island Arcs are associated with volcanoes
30
shelf
Ridge
shelf
slope
slope
hills
Atlantic
Ocean
plains
island
arc
seamounts
slope
trench
ridge
plain
Pacific Ocean
31
HYDROTHERMAL VENTS or
BLACK SMOKERS
• At a hydrothermal vent,
sea water that has
sunken into cracks in the
ocean crust and been
heated (sometimes to
over 180 degrees!) by
the interior of the earth
escapes through crust
cracks back into the
ocean.
• http://www.pmel.noaa.g
ov/vents/nemo/explorer
/multimedia.html
32
• The superheated
water beneath the
oceanic crust often
dissolves minerals
from nearby rocks.
• The precipitating
minerals often give
vent fluids different
colored “smoky”
appearances.
33
• As hot vent fluids
meet cold ocean
water, minerals
precipitate (fall) out
of vent fluids.
• The precipitating
minerals form
“chimneys” and other
formations on the sea
floor.
34
Hydrothermal Vent Sites
35
Related documents