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Published byAmice Pitts Modified over 9 years ago
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Once scientists were able to map the ocean floor, they discovered something surprising. The bottom of the ocean was not a flat, sandy plain stretching between the continents, as many people once thought.
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In fact, the ocean floor was rocky and dramatically uneven. Many previously unknown features of the seafloor were discovered.
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The Continental Margin The area where the underwater edge of a continent meets the ocean floor.
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Extending out from a continent's edge is a gently sloping, shallow area called the continental shelf (F)
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This shelf can extend for several hundred yards or several hundred miles.
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For every 100 yards you go out into the water, you drop about 3 feet, on average.
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Where the water of this shelf meets the land is called, Shoreline.
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This is the area anglers refer to as, deep sea fishing. Most of the ocean’s critters live on the shelf.
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At the edge of the shelf, the ocean floor drops off in a steep incline called the continental slope (A).
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Because of gravity and wave action, all left-over food, garbage and dead plants and critters get swept off the shelf and over this slope.
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turbidity current This action is called turbidity current. Turbidity is a fancy word for dirty water.
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turbidity current A turbidity current is a flow of water that carries large amounts of sediments.
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Just like a stream erodes the banks, turbidity current also creates erosion.
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Submarine Canyon The erosion cuts a valley into the continental margin, called a Submarine Canyon.
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Submarine canyons Submarine canyons are deep, V- shaped valleys cut into the rock of the continental margin.
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Your textbook mentions the Monterey Submarine Canyon off the coast of central California. http://www.mbnms- simon.org/sections/submarineCanyons/map s_graphs.php?sec=schttp://www.mbnms- simon.org/sections/submarineCanyons/map s_graphs.php?sec=sc
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The continental slope marks the true edge of the continent, where the rock that makes up the continent stops and the rock of the ocean floor begins.
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At the bottom of this 2 to 3 mile drop into the ocean, all that debris from the shelf piles-up.
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This pile is referred to as: The Continental Rise.
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