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INTRODUCTION What is at the Sea floor?
Continental margins and ocean floors Sediments
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CONTINENTAL MARGINS Continental Shelf Continental Rise Shelf Break
EARTH: An Introduction to Physical Geology 7th ed / Tarbuck & Lutgens fig 18.4 Continental Shelf Shelf Break Continental Slope Continental Rise Submarine Canyons
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CONTINENTAL MARGINS Thurman Essentials of Oceanography 6/e
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CONTINENTAL SHELVES Found at margins of continents Flat
Average km in width Formed by erosion and transport or dams Ends at change in slope (Shelf break)
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CONTINENTAL SLOPE Extends from shelf break to rise
Submarine canyons are major features Submarine canyons formed by: River erosion Turbidity currents
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SUBMARINE CANYONS
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GRADED BEDS Each layer grades from coarse at its base to fine at the top. EARTH: An Introduction to Physical Geology 7th ed / Tarbuck & Lutgens fig 6.21
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CONTINENTAL RISE Located at base of slope
Located where have a change of slope
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THE OCEAN BASIN FLOOR
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THE OCEAN BASIN FLOOR http://ibis.grdl.noaa.gov/cgi-bin/bathy/bathD.pl
Smith & Sandwell (1997) global ocean bathymetry map, the most complete, high-resolution image of sea floor topography currently available.
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THE OCEAN BASIN FLOOR Covers 30% of earth’s surface, continents cover 29% of surface Begins at base of continental rise Known as the abyssal plain Sedimentation: Passive and turbidity currents
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FEATURES OF THE SEA FLOOR
Seamounts Guyots Ridges and rises Trenches
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SEAMOUNTS & GUYOTS Thurman Essentials of Oceanography 6/e
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NEAR-RIDGE SEAMOUNTS Many originate near mid-ocean ridges
Are especially common near fast spreading ridge segments Preferentially located near bends or offsets in the ridge crest.
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Taney Seamounts perspective view from the south-southeast
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RIDGES AND RISES South West Indian Ridge
South West Indian Ridge
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RIDGES AND RISES Underwater volcanic mountain chain
extends for 65,000 km 1000 km wide m high Ridges = steep slopes; Rises = gentle slopes Contain central rift valley 15-50 km wide m deep Offset by fractures
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THE MID-ATLANTIC RIDGE
Thurman Essentials of Oceanography 6/e Figure A is a cross-sectional view of the fast-spreading Mid-Atlantic Ridge. Figure B is a cross-sectional view of the fast-spreading East Pacific Rise. On both cross sections, vertical exaggeration is 50 times normal. After Schmidt, V. A Planet Earth and the New Geoscience (Fig. V4), DuBuque, Iowa: Kendall/Hunt.
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TRENCHES EARTH: An Introduction to Physical Geology 7th ed / Tarbuck & Lutgens Distribution of the world's oceanic trenches, ridge system, fracture zones, and transform faults. Where transform faults offset ridge segments, they permit the ridge to change direction (curve) as can be seen in the Atlantic Ocean.
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TRENCHES Occur along some continents
Mariana trench the deepest (11,020 m) Peru-Chile trench the longest ( 5900 km)
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EARTH: An Introduction to Physical Geology 7th ed / Tarbuck & Lutgens
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