Chapter 20 Ocean Basins
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Chapter 20 Ocean Basins. Section 2 Features on the Ocean Floor Notes 20-2. Ocean Floor. Continental Margins Shallower parts of the ocean floor Made of continental crust and thick sediment layer Deep Ocean Basin Made of oceanic crust and thin sediment layer.
Chapter 20 Ocean Basins
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Chapter 20Ocean Basins Section 2 Features on the Ocean Floor Notes 20-2
Ocean Floor • Continental Margins • Shallower parts of the ocean floor • Made of continental crust and thick sediment layer • Deep Ocean Basin • Made of oceanic crust and thin sediment layer
Continental Margins • Often the boundary between continent and ocean floor is found offshore beneath ocean and thick sediments • Continental Shelf: • Slopes gently • Covered by shallow water – only about 60 m • Part of continental margin • Average = 70 km wide • Widest is from Siberia to Alaska in the Arctic Ocean
Continental Margins • United States: • East coast = 170 km on average • West coast = about 40 km on average • Affected by ocean levels • Lower sea level = more erosion and weathering • Higher sea level = places for deposits of sediments
Continental Margins • Continental Slope: • Steep side to the continental shelf • Boundary between continental crust and oceanic crust is at the base of the slope • Submarine canyons: • Deep valleys cut into the continental shelf and slope • Can be associated with river mouths or turbidity currents • Turbidity Currents: dense currents that carry large amounts of sediments down the slope
Turbidity Currents • Form when landslides of material run down a slope • Can be caused by earthquakes or by excessive sediment loads • When the sediments come to a stop, at the bottom of the slope, will cause a continental rise
Deep Ocean Basin • In the deep ocean, there are mountains, plains, trenches and volcanoes. • Mountains are higher and plains flatter in the ocean • Trenches: • Deepest land features on the earth • Long, narrow • Mariana Trench is deepest place in the world • Over 11,000 m deep (11 km) • Found near the island Guam • Most are found along the Pacific Ring of Fire
Deep Ocean Basin • Abyssal Plain: • Extremely flat area – flattest on the earth • Usually over 4 km below the ocean surface • Cover over half the ocean basin • Sediments fall to the abyssal plain from the continental margins • Atlantic Ocean has thick sediments • Pacific Ocean doesn’t • Trenches catch most of the sediments and hold them
Deep Ocean Basin • Mid-Ocean Ridges: • Continuous series of mountain ranges that run along the floors of all the oceans • Most are under the water • Iceland is one exception • Form when plates move away from each other • Causes a rift in the middle of the mountain range • Different parts break at different rates • Creates fracture zones – series of faults
Deep Ocean Basin • Seamounts: • Submerged volcanic mountains • At least 1,000 m high • Anything less is called an abyssal hill • Generally associated with hotspots • Hawaii and Canary Islands • Erosion occurs and seamounts sink • Flat-topped, submerged seamounts – guyots (GEE-oze) or tablemounts
Emperor Chain Seamounts Hawaiian Chain Seamounts
Links • Seamounts • http://www.coast-nopp.org/visualization_modules/physical_chemical/basin_coastal_morphology/principal_features/deep_ocean/seamounts/seamounts.html • General Info • http://oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/ • http://www.noaa.gov/
Homework Sec. Rev. p. 398 1-3