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Quiz #3 Due Wednesday before Midnight
Exam #1: 7PM, 2/15 (Tuesday) Here
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Class #9 OCEAN BASINS AND SEA FLOOR_ What’s down there?
Understanding the ocean basins in light of Plate Tectonics
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The shape of the ocean bottom
Plate Tectonics Theory provides a way to understand: Why we have ocean basins The origins of many undersea features
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The "hypsographic" curve
Gives percent of Earth surface at each elevation Observations: Sharp, narrow transition between continents and ocean Reflects fundamental differences in the crust (oceanic versus continental crust)
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What percentage of Earth surface is higher than xxx meters elevation?
Mean elevation of continents = +840 m Mean depth of oceans = -3,700 m
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Provinces of the sea floor:
Major Provinces Continental margins Ocean basin floor Mid-ocean ridges Trenches
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Provinces of the sea floor:
Major Provinces Continental margins Continental Shelf Shelf Break Continental Slope Continental Rise Submarine canyons
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Continental Shelf is an underwater extension of the continent.
Continental Margin ends near where continental crust (incl. sediments) ends
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General Diagram of a Continental Margin Note: Vertical dimension is expanded!!!!
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(Here’s the same figure, no vertical exaggeration)
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Provinces of the sea floor:
Major Provinces 1. Continental Margins- Last time 2. Ocean basin floor Ave. depth = 4,000m - 6,000 m Many areas flat (mantled by sediments) Volcanic features -Islands, often in chains (e.g., Hawaii) -Underwater hills, seamounts, "guyots"
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Sea Floor Features
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Seismic (= sound wave) Profiling: Reveals layers of sediment and rock
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Provinces of the sea floor:
Major Provinces 1. Continental Margins- Last time 2. Ocean basin floor 3. Mid-ocean ridges and rises Curvilinear feature circling the earth Higher than surrounding areas Divergent plate boundary Young, hot oceanic lithosphere
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Mid-Ocean Ridges: Details
Composed of basalt from undersea volcanoes Rift valley at the plate boundary- earthquakes Heat flow high Magmas carry additional heat into upper crust Some magmas erupt to form lavas Water circulation driven by this heat Hydrothermal vents
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Fracture Zones
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Provinces of the sea floor:
Smaller Provinces (small area, still important) Trenches 6,000m - 11,000 m deep -- deepest regions Occur at margins of oceans, especially Pacific East Pacific -- edge of continental margin West Pacific -- associated with volcanic island chains
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Trenches Where are they? Almost all found around the Pacific
Why are they deep? Bending of plate Downward pull of dense, sinking lithosphere Continental margins greatly altered by trenches
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Trenches
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Shallow <100km Deep
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