The Ocean EARTH: The only planet w/ Oceans (or liquid water) Covers 71% of earth’s surface...

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The Ocean EARTH: The only planet w/ Oceans (or liquid water) Covers 71% of earth’s surface “Divided” into 4 large basins Pacific (largest, deepest) – Atlantic – Indian Arctic (smallest, shallowest) A fifth? The Antarctic…

Transcript of The Ocean EARTH: The only planet w/ Oceans (or liquid water) Covers 71% of earth’s surface...

Page 1: The Ocean EARTH: The only planet w/ Oceans (or liquid water) Covers 71% of earth’s surface “Divided” into 4 large basins –Pacific (largest, deepest) –Atlantic.

The Ocean

• EARTH: The only planet w/ Oceans (or liquid water)

• Covers 71% of earth’s surface• “Divided” into 4 large basins

– Pacific (largest, deepest)– Atlantic– Indian– Arctic (smallest, shallowest)– A fifth? The Antarctic…

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Ocean basins

South pole view

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Ocean Basin Depths

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Interior of Earth

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The Difference Between an Ocean and a Continent…ROCKS!

• Continent: very thick, very old, less dense and made up of Granite

• Ocean (floor): younger, more dense, not as thick and made up of Basalt

• Thus, the “Ocean Floor” “sinks” below the continent(s) and provides the habitats of marine organisms

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Continental Drift

• If we know the Continental Crust and Oceanic Crust have different densities…how did they “separate” to become 7 continents and 4 oceans?

• We start (Pangea) 210 mya!

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PANGEA (the super continent)

• 180 million yrs. ago – all continents were attached together and have slowly moved apart over time

• Discovered (S. F. Bacon, 1600’s) “Coasts of continents fit together like a puzzle.”

• Lead to theory of continental drift and plate techtonics.

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Pangea (reptile fossils)

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• So…WHERE DID WE START AND WHERE ARE WE NOW?

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Figure 2.14a

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Figure 2.14e

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PLATE TECTONICS

• Continental drift leads to the theory of Plate tectonics

• Although Bacon discussed it in the 1600’s, it was not understood until the 1960’s.

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The Ocean Floor (P. Tectonics)

• Mid-Ocean Ridges– Underwater mountain ranges – Fault: Crack in earths crust– Rift: Ocean crust separates & creates “cracks”– Earthquakes are common

• Trenches– Deep depressions in the seafloor– Mostly in Pacific, Volcanoes common

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Major features of Sea Floor

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CO 2

Mid-Atlantic Ridge (above sea surface in Iceland)

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Sea-Floor Spreading (plate tectonics)

• New sea-floor forms at mid-ocean ridges (where the edge of these “plates” meet)

• Continental Drift: If the plate (as it spreads away from the ridge) contains continental crust (on top) the continents “drift” (move) apart.

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How? Convection and Density!

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Figure 2.08Sea Floor Spreading:X-section of sea floor @ Mid ocean ridge

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Figure 2.07

Paleomagnetism:Normal magnetism@ ridge crests (butReversed in other locations)

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We get:

• Plate boundaries

• With geologic activity, such as earthquakes, that (may) correspond w/ these plate boundaries

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Earthquake and Volcano distribution

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Lithospheric plate boundaries

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How does everything move? Plate Tectonics!

• The earth’s upper layer, the lithosphere, is divided into plates

• Plates may contain sea-floor, continents, or both

• Plates are moving (few cm per year), floating on top of the earth’s molten mantle

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Subduction (plate techtonics)

• sea-floor is destroyed by plunging back into the earth’s interior at trenches

• When 2 plates collide, 1 dips below the other (in to the mantle) and 1 is destroyed (causing, sometimes, earthquakes)

• Ocean vs. Cont. plate: ocean plate destroyed, can get coastal mountain ranges

• Ocean vs. Ocean plate: 1 dips = volcano or earthquake• Cont. vs. cont: none destroyed, mnt. Ranges fold• 2 plates, no collision, lock/shear/earthquake (S. Andreas F)

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Figure 2.10

Continental + Oceanic plate collision = trench, earthquake

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Figure 2.11

2 oceanic plates collide = trench/earthquake

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Figure 2.13

SanAndreasFault(CA)

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Sea Floor Regions

• All of this “plate” movement and geologic activity that occurs under the water yields different sea floor regions

• Each dependent upon depth, width, slope etc.

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Regions of the sea-floor

• Continental Margins contain continental shelf, slope and rise

• Cont. shelf = shallow, most “rich” (diverse)

• Deep Ocean Floor, “Abyssal Plain”

• The Ocean “floor” (on average) is 2-3.5 miles BELOW the oceans (water) surface!

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Figure 2.17

Continental margin

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Active vs. Passive MarginsAn active margin is a geologically very “active” area; whereas aPassive margin is a geologically in-active area.

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Figure 2.18(Passive Margin) Continental Shelf (19 mi. off of Atlantic City, NJ)

Shelf break

Tom’s Canyon

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The California Coast

MontereyCanyon

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Active Coast (CA)

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Margins

• We know what it looks like at the top of the (Continental) margin but what does it look like AT the margin (at the ridge line, deep under the oceans surface)?

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Figure 2.24“Black Smoker”Hydro-thermalVent(at aMidOceanRidge)

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Black Smoker, cross section

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Who are we?

• Iceland, Azores = fault (mountain)• Andes (mts.) = subduction trench (o-c)• Aleutian/Mariana (Is.) = sub. trench (o-o)• Himalayas (mts.) = sub. Trench (c-c)• Hydrothermal vents: Deep Ocean

• See Fig. 2.5 for locations and other “interesting” places to visit.

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Major features of Sea Floor