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Geological Oceanography Ocean Topography The scientific study of the origin, history, and structure of the earth
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Topography is a graphic representation of the surface features of a place or region …in this case, the ocean basins. What do ocean basins look like?
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How do we know what it looks like? Soundings are made by sending a sound pulse into the water.
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Echosounders are attached to the hull of a ship or a towed vehicle. An echosounder sends a sound pulse into the water. The sound energy travels through the water to the ocean bottom where it is reflected back towards the source, received, and accurately measured.
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Undersea structures shown by Sonar This surprised oceanographers who expected the ocean bottoms to be smoother, more like a bowl (deepest in the middle and getting shallower towards continents).
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Features found on the seafloor Continent Mid-ocean ridge Sea mount Oceanic trench Abyssal plain Continental shelf Central rift zone Depth (m)
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Geological Oceanography Journal Question http://videos.howstuffworks.com/science/s onar-videos-playlist.htm#video-30297http 1. Describe how scientists find out what the ocean floor looks like?
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The ocean basin: Structures 1.Continental Margin:Continental Shelf Continental Slope Continental Rise Submarine Canyons 2. Deep Ocean Basin: Abyssal Plains Oceanic ridges 3. Trenches 4. Seamounts and Guyots 5. Atolls
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Submerged, outer edge of the continents. Two types: 1. Active Margin (Pacific) 2. Passive Margin (Atlantic) Found on the leading edge of the continent crashing into an oceanic plate. No collisions taking place, tectonic activity is minimal
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Continental Shelf: Similar to the continent (compared to the deep ocean). They have hills, depressions, mineral and oil deposits. In Atlantic Canada, the continental shelf holds the best fishing areas.
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Submarine Canyon: on the edge of the continental shelf V-shaped indentations into the continental shelf, usually ending in a fan shaped wedge of sediments.
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The Gully! Submarine canyon off Nova Scotia Marine protected area because of the rare corals found there The natural gas pipeline goes right by it though! The Gully
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This coral forms colonies up to two meters high and takes between 200 and 500 years to grow such a colony. They only grow 1.5 millimeters a year." Bubble Gum coral Largest reported from N.S. was 7m tall!
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Deep Ocean Basin Abyssal plains: From the Greek meaning “without bottom”. They are flat, cold, dark, featureless expanses of sediment-covered ocean floor. They are most common in the Atlantic. Ocean Ridges: Mountainous chains of actively spreading ocean floor. They can rise 2km from the ocean floor and sometimes form islands such as Iceland, the Azores and Easter island.
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Mid-Atlantic Ridge
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Trenches Deep gap in ocean floor, formed by movement of plates. Example: Mariana Trench is 10,668 meters deep They are among the most active areas on Earth. They are the deepest areas of the Earth’s crust. 90% of trenches are found around the Pacific rim.
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Seamounts and Guyots Both are undersea volcanoes that originated at a hotspot or along a ridge Guyots once reached the surface of the ocean and have flat, eroded tops Seamounts never reached the surface, so they have pointy tops
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Atolls A ring shaped island of coral reefs and coral debris. These often form over sinking inactive volcanoes.
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Ocean floor features: Trenches Mountain chains Sea mounts Fracture zones
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Copy and complete this Chart Ocean StructureTwo – Three Key Facts Continental Margin Deep Ocean Basin Trenches Seamounts and Guyots Atolls
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