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Ocean Floor Features

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The valley ranges from 15 to 30 miles in width and contains an active seismic ... to fill depressions of the rocky ocean floor remains of marine life ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ocean Floor Features


1
Ocean Floor Features
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(No Transcript)
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http//ga.water.usgs.gov/edu/waterdistribution.htm
l
Source Nace, U.S. Geological Survey, 1967
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East Coast of the U.S.
5
How are the ocean floor features found?
6
SONAR
  • Sound
  • Navigation
  • Range
  • The echo sounder calculates water depth by
    measuring time between emission of a sound signal
    directed toward the ocean floor and the return
    echo.

7
Atlantic Ocean Floor Profile
8
Ocean Profile
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Ocean Profile
10
Topography of the Ocean Floor
  • Continental Shelf
  • Continental Slope
  • Submarine Canyon
  • Abyssal Plain
  • Seamount
  • Mid-Ocean Ridge
  • Rift Zone
  • Ocean Trench

11
Continental Shelf Slope
  • Continental shelf a relatively flat part of the
    continent covered by seawater. Lies between the
    coast and the continental slope.
  • Continental slope steeply dipping surface
    between the continental shelf and the deep ocean
    basin.

12
Continental Shelf Slope
San Francisco
Monterey Bay
The shelf break marks a distinct change in the
slope of the sea floor from the flat continental
shelf to the steep sea floor of the continental
slope.
13
CONTINENTAL SHELF
  • About 8 of the global seafloor area
  • Source of fish, both commercial and sport, and in
    some areas, oil and natural gas.
  • Varies in size off the coasts of the U.S.
  • West coast narrow
  • East coast - wide

14
CONTINENTAL SLOPE
  • Gradually rises from the abyssal plain but climbs
    as much as 45 degrees as it approaches land.
  • Continental Rise - sediment deposits at the base
    of the slope
  • Slopes are often gouged by deep valleys or
    submarine canyons

15
Submarine Canyon
HUDSON CANYON
CONTINENTAL SHELF
CONTINENTAL SLOPE
HUDSON CANYON - First discovered in 1864
16
Submarine Canyons
San Francisco
Canyon leading into Monterey Bay
  • Submarine canyons are v-shaped canyons cut into
    the continental slope. Many canyons are
    associated with major rivers such as the Congo,
    Hudson, and others.
  • most canyons were originally formed during the
    last Ice Age when the water level was lower
  • some are the result of earthquakes.

17
ABYSSAL PLAIN
  • The true ocean floor
  • Result of sediment drifting downward to fill
    depressions of the rocky ocean floor
  • remains of marine life
  • fine, clay-sized particles (ooze)

18
Abyssal Plain
Continental shelf
Continental slope
Abyssal Plain
The abyssal plain is the flat, almost level area
of the deep ocean basin.
OOZE!!!
19
Seamount
seamounts
Coast of central California
Monterey
Same area, different perspective
A volcanic mountain found on an ocean basin. It
is not a result of subduction or formed at the
mid-ocean ridge. Possibly an island that has
since eroded.
20
SEAMOUNT GUYOT
  • Isolated mountains rising from 3,000 to 10,000
    feet above the surrounding seabed.
  • Volcanic origin
  • Seamounts are found in all oceans, but are more
    numerous in the Pacific Ocean, with over 2,000
    identified.
  • Guyots flat-top seamounts

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SEAMOUNT GUYOT
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Map of Seamounts
K. Stocks. 2003. Map of Sampled Seamounts.
SeamountsOnline an online information system for
seamount biology. World Wide Web electronic
publication. http//seamounts.sdsc.edu.
23
Mid-Ocean Ridge
Mid-Atlantic Ridge
Underwater mountain chain that rises from the
ocean basins. Created by rising magma.
24
Map view showing sea floor spreading at the
Mid-Atlantic ridge.
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MID-OCEAN RIDGE
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MID-OCEAN RIDGE
  • Several mid-ocean ridges are longer than the
    longest mountain ranges on Earth.
  • Can rise to above sea level to form islands
  • Iceland and the Azores - Atlantic Ocean
  • Galapagos Islands in the Pacific Ocean.
  • Most of the ridges crest at a depth of about
    8,000 feet

27
MID-OCEAN RIDGE
  • Oceanic ridges have two peaks, separated by a
    rift valley. The valley ranges from 15 to 30
    miles in width and contains an active seismic
    area.

Americas
Africa / Europe
Example of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge
28
Rift Zone
A system of cracks in Earths crust through which
molten material rises. Rift zones are found in
the middle of the mid-ocean ridges. Strange
animal life and unique geologic structures have
been found here.
29
Rift Zone
  • Divergent zones are where two plates are moving
    apart
  • Convection currents are rising, bringing up heat
  • Earthquakes and volcanic activity

30
29 N
Volcanic ridge on zero-age crust, note small and
larger volcanic cones. See cratered volcano at
the top? The narrow, linear, bright features in
the rest of the image are fault scarps. Uniform
gray areas are sediment accumulating.
Rift Zone
31
Black Smokers
32
Black Smokers
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Black Smokers
34
Trench
A deep trough on the ocean floor where oceanic
crust is forced below continental or other
oceanic crust.
35
TRENCH
  • Found at subduction zones (near continents and
    island chains)
  • At least 26 trenches have been identified
  • 22 are in the Pacific Ocean
  • 1in the Atlantic Ocean (Puerto Rico Trench)
  • 1in the Indian Ocean (Java Trench)

36
TRENCH
37
TRENCH
  • Depths of major trenches exceed 18,000 feet, and
    vary from 10 to 22 miles in width.
  • The deepest is the Challenger Deep, 35,810 feet
    deep, in the Marianas Trench Mount Everest -
    29,028 feet
  • Trenches are not the same
  • Peru-Chile Trench off the west coast of South
    America is nearly 1,100 miles long.
  • The Japan Trench is 150 miles long and is the
    shortest.
  • The Tonga Trench, located between New Zealand and
    Samoa, is the narrowest and straightest.
  • The Kurile Trench between Japan and Kamchatka is
    the widest.

38
MarIana Trench
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