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Measuring bathymetry Ocean depths and topography of ocean floor

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Presentation on theme: "Measuring bathymetry Ocean depths and topography of ocean floor"— Presentation transcript:

1 Measuring bathymetry Ocean depths and topography of ocean floor
Measurement of depths from sea surface to underwater features : bathymetry as measurement of elevation on land : topography

2 Bathymetric techniques
Echo sounding/Sonar Reflection of sound signals Side-scan sonar Towed behind research vessel (ship) Ex. GLORIA Sound waves are influenced by differences in density; ie. seawater and seafloor – sediment and rock; speed of sound depends on density of material; refraction v. reflection (less energetic)

3 Bathymetric techniques
Fig Seismic Profiling Distance to the object is equal to the velocity in the material times one-half the time required for the sound signal to travel from the surface to the object and back to the receiver. Echo sounder can be used to determine distance to objects on ocean floor; thickness of rock or sediment requires small explosions.

4 Bathymetric techniques, cont…
Data gap in center Fig. 3.2

5 Bathymetric techniques, cont…
Satellite Measurements Ocean floor features cause sea surface to rise

6 Marine provinces Continental margins Deep-ocean basins Mid-ocean ridge
3 major provinces Continental margins Shallow-water areas close to shore Deep-ocean basins Deep-water areas farther from land Mid-ocean ridge Submarine mountain range

7 Continental margins Passive or active Passive (Atlantic-type)
Not close to any plate boundary No major tectonic activity Ex: coast of United States east

8 Continental margins, cont…
Active (Pacific-type) Associated with convergent or transform plate boundaries Much tectonic activity Convergent active margin Oceanic-continental convergence Ex: South America western

9 Continental margins, cont…
Transform active margin Associated with transform plate boundaries Ex: Coastal California along the fault San Andreas

10 Continental margins Fig. 3.6

11 Continental shelf Extends from shoreline to shelf break
Shallow, gently sloping

12 Continental slope Submarine canyons cut into slope by turbidity currents Mixture of seawater and sediments Move under influence of gravity

13 Continental rise Transition between continental crust and oceanic crust

14 Deep ocean basin features
Depths greater than 4000 m Abyssal plains Volcanic peaks Ocean trenches Oceanic ridges and rises

15 Abyssal plains Very flat depositional surfaces from base of continental rise

16 Volcanic peaks Poke through sediment cover Below sea level: Seamounts

17 Ocean trenches Associated with subduction zones Deepest parts of ocean
Ex. Mariana Trench

18 Mid-ocean ridge and rises
Longest mountain chains Basaltic lava Divergent plate boundary

19 Volcanic features of mid-ocean ridge
Hydrothermal vents Heated subsurface seawater migrates through cracks in ocean crust


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