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History • Darwin and the hms Beagle 1831-1836 • Studied barnacles HMS Challenger led by Sir Charles Wyville Thomson (1830-1882) Findings • 4,717 new species; • The first systematic plot of currents and temperatures in the ocean; • A map of bottom deposits much of which has remained current to the present; • An outline of the main contours of the ocean basins; and • The discovery of the mid-Atlantic Ridge; 1,800 feet, findings such as: Charles Wyville Thomas • Spearheaded the challenger expedition Alexander Agassiz • 1877 • Studied the collaboration of marine animals. • Founded Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute. Habitat •Where an organism lives Ocean Basin •Depressions filled with sea water that we call oceans Pacific •Largest and deepest Atlantic & Indian •About half the size as the Pacific & almost as deep Figure 2.1 Arctic •Smallest and shallowest Density •Mass per unit volume •D = m/V Earth's Structure • Inner core: 0-1200 km • Outer core: 1200-2500 km • Mantle: 2500-6300 km • Crust: Outer most 100 Oceanic Crust •Crust directly under oceans •thin & dense •made of mostly basalt Continental Crust • Crust containing the continents • thick & less dense • Made of mostly granite Plate Tectonics • The Earth’s crust is made up of many plate that are in constant motion Pangaea • Original supercontinent containing all of the present day continents Plate Boundary • Crack between plates • Where two plate meet • Fault line • Rift Plate Boundaries and Geologic Processes • The lithosphere is fragmented into fourteen major tectonic plates • Plates are moving across the Earth's surface in different directions and at different velocities. • Many geologic processes, such as plutonism, volcanism, and earthquakes result from the interaction of plates along their boundaries Types of Boundaries • Mid-ocean Ridges • Subduction Boundary • Shear Boundary • Mountain Range Mid-Ocean Ridge • Divergent boundaries • Spreading center • Continuous chain of volcanic submarine mountains that encircle the globe • Like seams on a baseball Convergent boundaries • formed between two plates that are moving toward one another • 2 forms • Subduction • Collisional Subduction • When an oceanic plate slides under another plate • Both volcanic and earthquake activity occur • Forms very deep trenches Figure 2.7 Collisional Boundary • Mountain Range • Forms when two continental plates collide Shear (transform) Boundary • When two plates slide parallel to each other • Only earthquake activity • San Andreas Fault Hot Spot • Forms when there is enough heat upwelling to form a volcano, but not enough to form a mid-ocean ridge Active Margin • A continental margin that is geologically active • A continental margin near a plate boundary • USA’s west coast Continental Margin • Where the continent meets the sea Passive Margin • A continental margin with no geological activity • A continental margin not near a plate boundary • USA’s east coast Sediment • Loose material like sand or mud that settles to the bottom of any body of water • Sediment thickness increases as you move from m-o-r Sediment is the word geologists use for loose pieces of minerals and rock. Types of Sediment • Lithogenous: from a nonliving source • Biogenous: from a living source Calcareous Ooze • Carbon based sediment • Sediment containing calcium carbonate • CaCO3 Siliceous Ooze • Silicon based sediment • Sediment containing silicon dioxide or silicates -4 • SiO2 or SiO4 Ocean bottom sediment map Ocean bottom sediment map. Lithogenous areas are mauve, biogenous areas are purple and brown (purple = siliceous ooze, brown = calcareous ooze), and hydrogenous areas are blue. Seamounts •Oceanic volcanoes that do not penetrate the surface of the ocean Guyots • Flat-topped seamounts • Seamounts that are no longer active Guyots Hydrothermal Vent • Oceanic hot spot where hot gases escape through the ocean floor Black Smoker • Another name for hydrothermal vents • As hydrogen sulfide gas precipitates in cold water, you get a black precipitate Passive Margins Parts • Continental shelf • Shelf break • Continental slope • Continental rise • The Abyss Continental Shelf • Nearly flat, slightly sloping, not too deep area just off the shoreline Atlantic Continental Shelf Shelf Break • Where the continental shelf abruptly breaks off into a steep slope Continental Slope • The steeply sloping part of the margin that goes from the shelf break to the ocean floor Continental Rise • Where sediment builds up between the slope and the abyss The Abyss •The Ocean Floor •The Abyssal plain Pelagic • In the water column or at any depth in the sea Pelagic Zones • Epipelagic • Mesopelagic • Bathopelagic • Abyssopelagic • Hadopelagic Epipelagic Zone • Surface water where light can penetrate & photosynthesis can take place • Photic zone Mesopelagic Zone Middle zone, just below the epipelagic where no light penetrates, but is shadowy Twilight zone Bathopelagic Zone • Deep ocean water where no light penetrates and it is pitch black • Complete darkness Abyssopelagic Zone • The water near the sea floor • Bottom water Hadopelagic Zone • Sea water in the deep trenches • Trench water The Deep Sea • Because the bathopelagic, abyssopelagic, & hadopelagic zones are so similar, they are lumped together as the deep sea