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The Earths OceansPart I

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The ocean covers about 360 million square miles of the Earth's surface. ... They are possibly the flattest places on the planet. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Earths OceansPart I


1
The Earths Oceans-Part I
  • The Water Planet

2
The Blue Planet
  • The world is dominated by interconnected oceans.
    It just depends on your viewpoint.

3
The Blue Planet
  • Nearly 71 of the Earths surface is covered by
    the global ocean.

4
How Big is the Ocean
  • The ocean covers about 360 million square miles
    of the Earths surface. Oceanographers divide
    the oceans into four major ocean basins
  • The Pacific
  • The Atlantic
  • The Indian
  • The Arctic

5
The Pacific Ocean
  • The Pacific Ocean is the largest ocean. It is
    the largest single geographic feature on the
    Earth. It comprises more than half on the
    worlds oceans. With an average depth of about
    3,900 meters, it is the deepest ocean in the
    world as well.

6
The Atlantic Ocean
  • The Atlantic Ocean is about half the size of the
    Pacific Ocean. The Atlantic is slightly
    shallower than the Pacific. Both the Atlantic
    and Pacific Oceans are bounded on their eastern
    and western sides by continents.

7
The Indian Ocean
  • While the Indian Ocean is slightly smaller than
    the Atlantic, it is about the same depth. Unlike
    the Atlantic and Pacific, the Indian Ocean is
    located almost entirely in the southern
    hemisphere.

8
The Arctic Ocean
  • The Arctic Ocean accounts for only about 7 of
    the worlds oceans. It is also only about one
    fourth as deep as the other oceans of the world.

9
Bathymetry
  • The study of the oceans topography is called
    bathymetry.

10
Oceanographic History
  • The first serious look at the ocean came in the
    1870s. The Challenger conducted an 6-year
    voyage to study the worlds oceans. The
    Challenger sailed approximately 128,000 miles on
    its journey.

11
Current Technologies for Exploring the Ocean
  • Today, there are various technologies available
    to explore the ocean. These include sonar,
    satellites and submersibles. This allows modern
    scientists to explore the ocean floor more
    efficiently and accurately than ever.

12
Sonar
  • Sonar stands for Sound Navigation and Ranging.
    Sound waves are bounced off the ocean bottom and
    timed as they arrive. The difference in arrival
    time can be translating into a depth.

13
Sonar
  • Today, modern multibeam radar sends out multiple
    sound signals and receivers to establish the
    depth of wide bands along the ocean floor as
    opposed to narrow points.

14
Satellites
  • Satellites are able to compensate for waves,
    tides, currents and atmospheric effects to
    produce ocean surface and topographic features
    images. Scientists have discovered that the
    ocean is not flat. Where seamounts and ridges
    occur the ocean bulges up. Where undersea
    canyons occur, the ocean has depressions.
  • SEAsat

15
Satellite Images

16
Submersibles
  • Submersibles are small underwater craft capable
    of diving to great depths. Submersibles such as
    Alvin and Sea Cliff II can reach ocean depths of
    between 4,000 and 6,000 meters, respectively.

17
Submersibles
  • More modern versions of submersibles are
    unmanned an operated with computers and joy
    sticks. These submersibles operate longer and
    cheaper because they have no crews that require
    life support or comforts.
  • Autosub

18
Warm Up
  • What are the three major divisions of the sea
    floor?
  • Define the parts and characteristics of each
    division.
  • What is a seamount?
  • What is a guyot?
  • What is a turbidity current?
  • Where do you find convergent boundaries?
  • Where do you find divergent boundaries?

19
Ocean Topography
  • The ocean floor has been divided into three
    major regions
  • the continental margins
  • the ocean basin floor
  • the mid-ocean ridge

20
The Continental Margins
  • The continental margin includes the continental
    shelf, the continental slope and the continental
    rise. It does not include the abyssal plain.

21
The Continental Margins The Continental Shelf
  • Continental shelves contain mineral deposits,
    oil reservoirs, natural gas, and huge sand and
    gravel deposits.

22
The Continental MarginsThe Continental Slope
  • The continental slope is located just seaward of
    the continental shelf. Averaging only about 20
    kilometers in width, it marks the boundary
    between the continental and oceanic crusts.
  • The slope often has
  • deep channels cut into
  • them. These occur
  • at time when the
  • worlds oceans are
  • Low and rivers cut
  • deeply into the exposed
  • sediment. Sometimes
  • Large underwater land-
  • Slides occur here that
  • Create turbidity currents.

23
Turbidity Currents
  • Artificially created turbidity current

24
The Continental MarginsThe Continental Rise
  • The continental rise marks the area of the ocean
    floor where the incline of the sea floor is
    reduced. The continental rise may be hundreds of
    kilometers wide.

25
The Ocean Basin Floor
  • Between the continental margin and the mid-ocean
    ridges, lies the ocean basin floor. Some of the
    features of the ocean floor basin include
    deep-ocean trenches, abyssal plains and seamounts
    and guyots.

26
Deep-ocean Trenches
  • Deep-ocean trenches are long, narrow creases in
    the ocean floor that form in the deepest parts of
    the ocean. Most of the trenches form along the
    margins of the Pacific and exceed 10,000 meters
    in depth. The deepest know point on the planet
    is located in the Marianas Trench and is over
    11,000 meters deep.
  • These mark convergent
  • plate boundaries.

27
Abyssal Plains
  • Abyssal plains are huge expanses of extremely
    flat sediments. They are possibly the flattest
    places on the planet. These plains are formed
    from sediment carried by turbidity currents and
    settling suspended sediments.

28
Seamounts and Guyots
  • Seamounts are undersea volcanic peaks that dot
    the ocean floor. They are volcanoes that have
    yet to reach the surface.

29
Seamounts and Guyots
  • Once volcanic islands break the oceans surface
    the begin to erode and form flat-topped, once
    active structures called guyots.

30
The Mid-Ocean Ridge
  • Mid-Ocean ridges are found at the center of most
    ocean basins. It is an interconnected system of
    underwater mountains that develop above newly
    formed ocean crust.

31
The Mid-Ocean Ridge
  • Mid-Ocean ridges are areas of seafloor spreading
    or divergent plate boundaries that we talked
    about earlier. This is where new land is formed.
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