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Ocean Floor Landscapes

• Subsurface land features
Continental shelf, continental slope, continental rise, abyssal plains Mid-ocean ridges and trenches, plate tectonics, Mid-Atlantic Ridge, Mariana Trench
• Ocean bottom: average depth of sediment .3 mile, consists of rock particles and organic remains
• Composition of seawater: dilute solution of salts which come from weathering and erosion 
of continental rocks. Sodium chloride is the main salt.

Ocean Floor Vocabulary
 
1.Continental shelf:
it extends in a gentle downward slope from the shorelines of the continents into the oceans. It covers about 5% of Earth’s surface.
 
2.Continental edge:
is the point at which the shelf surrounding each continent begins to angel sharply downward toward the ocean depths.
 
3.Continental slope:
is the cliff-like drop beyond the continental edge
 
4.Continental rise:
stretches from the lower portion of the continent slop to the deepest part of the ocean
 
5.Abyssal plain:
the bottom of the ocean that covers about 46% of Earth’s surface. Parts are flat, but others have deep canyons called trenches.
 
6.Mid-ocean ridge:
the chain of underwater mountains. It is the longest mountain range in the world, passing through the Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific Oceans.
 
7.Seamounts:
are free-standing mountains formed by volcanoes. These seamounts havebeen flattened because of wave action

 

oceanfloor.gif
File Attachments:
  1. Ocean floor reading.pdf Ocean floor reading.pdf
Author: Marilyn Knapp
Last modified: 6/27/2015 6:55 AM (EDT)