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OCEAN BOTTOM FEATURES

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OCEAN BOTTOM FEATURES. OCEAN BOTTOM FEATURES. TOPOGRAPHIC FEATURES ... Summer time residents of each zone usually include surfers, waders, & sun bathers. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: OCEAN BOTTOM FEATURES


1
OCEAN BOTTOM FEATURES
2
OCEAN BOTTOM FEATURES
3
TOPOGRAPHIC FEATURES
  • Continental margins
  • Shelf up to 300 km wide 150-200 m deep
  • Slope 20 - 100 km wide 200 to 2000 m deep
  • (Often furrowed by canyons) Slopes 1 in 40.
  • Rise up to 300 km wide 2000 to 5000 m deep
  • (Slopes 1 in 700 to 1 in 1000)
  • Trench 600 to 11,000 m deep

4
TOPOGRAPHIC FEATURES
  • There are 26 trenches in the world ocean
  • 3 in the Atlantic Ocean
  • 1 in the Indian Ocean
  • 22 in the Pacific Ocean
  • Deep sea basins about 5000 m deep
  • Abyssal Plains are extremely flat,
    sediment-filled
  • Abyssal Hills rise from the plains up to 1000 m
  • Mid-ocean ridge Interconnected mountain system
    up to 400 km wide Rises to 3000 - 1000 m
  • Central rift valley 20 - 50 km wide cuts 1000 -
    3000 m deep into the ridge system

5
OCEAN BOTTOM FEATURES
  • Seamounts Trenches. Trenches are found
    adjacent parallel to continents island chains.

6
  • Depths of major trenches exceed 18,000 feet.
  • The deepest is the Marianas Trench, 35,810 ft.

7
  • The continental slope gradually rises from the
    abyssal plains climbs as much as 45 deg as it
    approaches land.
  • In some areas the slope is interrupted by broad
    wedges of sediment deposits called a continental
    rise.

8
  • The continental shelf, the region from the
    coastline to the edge of the continental slope,
    covers about 8 of the global seafloor area.
  • Average width is 40 miles.

9
  • Seamounts are isolated mountains rising from
    3,000 to 10,000 feet above the surrounding
    seabed.

10
  • A beach is an expanse of sand or pebbles along a
    seashore, that is washed by the tide waves.
  • Three zones Offshore, foreshore and back shore.

11
  • Summer time residents of each zone usually
    include surfers, waders, sun bathers.
  • The offshore zone has incoming waves that feel
    bottom and curl over as breakers or surf.

12
  • Foreshore zone is regularly exposed to high low
    tides.
  • On the landward edge of the foreshore is the
    beach scarp, usually a rise of several feet
    caused by the eroding action of stronger waves.

13
  • The Backshore zone extends from the water line to
    the inland area where the sea does not influence
    vegetation.
  • The principal feature of the backshore is the
    berm that marks the ordinary limit of a high tide.

14
  • Most beach sand consists of light-colored quartz
    and feldspar sand grains, the result of
    weathering and erosion of rocks such as granite.

15
  • Some beach sand comes directly from shoreline
    erosion, but much is created by the action of
    rivers flowing to the sea.

16
  • Tropical beaches often consist entirely of shell
    and coral fragments.
  • Beaches in areas of volcanic activity can be
    black, its sand created by erosion of volcanic
    rock.
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