DOC PREVIEW
UMass Dartmouth MAR 110 - Ocean Basin Physiography & Plate Tectonics

This preview shows page 1-2-3-4-5 out of 16 pages.

Save
View full document
View full document
Premium Document
Do you want full access? Go Premium and unlock all 16 pages.
Access to all documents
Download any document
Ad free experience
View full document
Premium Document
Do you want full access? Go Premium and unlock all 16 pages.
Access to all documents
Download any document
Ad free experience
View full document
Premium Document
Do you want full access? Go Premium and unlock all 16 pages.
Access to all documents
Download any document
Ad free experience
View full document
Premium Document
Do you want full access? Go Premium and unlock all 16 pages.
Access to all documents
Download any document
Ad free experience
View full document
Premium Document
Do you want full access? Go Premium and unlock all 16 pages.
Access to all documents
Download any document
Ad free experience
Premium Document
Do you want full access? Go Premium and unlock all 16 pages.
Access to all documents
Download any document
Ad free experience

Unformatted text preview:

4 September 2007 MAR 110 Lab 3: Ex 1-3 - PT 1Laboratory 3: Exercise 1-3 Ocean Basin Physiography & Plate Tectonics 3-1. THE OCEAN BASIN The world ocean basin is an extensive suite of connected depressions (or basins) that are filled with salty water; covering 72% of the Earth’s surface. The ocean basin bathymetric profile in Figure 3-1 highlights features of a typical ocean basin, which is bordered by continental margins at the ocean’s edge. Starting at the coast, the sea floor the slopes slightly across the continental shelf to the shelf break where it plunges down the steeper continental slope to continental rise and the abyssal plain, which is flat because accumulated sediments. The continental shelf is the flooded edge of the continent -extending from the beach to the shelf break, with typical depths ranging from 130 m to 200 m. The sea floor slopes over wide shelves are 1° to 2° - virtually flat- and somewhat steeper over narrower shelves. Continental shelves are generally gently undulating surfaces, sometimes interrupted by hills and valleys (see Figure 3-2).4 September 2007 MAR 110 Lab 3: Ex 1-3 - PT 2 The continental slope connects the continental shelf to the deep ocean, with typical depths of 2 to 3 km. While appearing steep in these vertically exaggerated pictures, the bottom slopes of a typical continental slope region are modest angles of 4° to 6°. Continental slope regions adjacent to deep ocean trenches tend to descend somewhat more steeply than normal. Sediments derived from the weathering of the continental material are delivered by rivers and continental shelf flow to the upper continental slope region just beyond the continental shelf break. These sediment accumulations eventually become unstable creating under water landslides called turbidity currents. The sediment-laden turbidity currents are density currents that flow rapidly down-slope under the force of gravity and scouring the bottom to form submarine canyons (see Figure 3-2). Upon reaching the bottom, the turbidity currents spread laterally, slow, and deposit their sediments in enormous fan-shaped accumulations called submarine fans. Eventually their sediment load is delivered to the continental rise region in the form of a submarine fan (Figure 3-2). The continental rise regions, which are composed of land-derived sediment accumulations that may be up to several kilometers thick and tens of kilometers wide, have slopes between 1° and 5° (Figure 3-2). Overlapping submarine fans are believed to form the continental rise, which transitions to the abyssal plain (Figure 3-1). The abyssal plain is remarkably flat and featureless due to the long-term rain particles that have formed sediments that have buried most sea floor irregularities. The abyssal plain region transitions to the abyssal hill region, where isolated knolls and seamounts protrude through the sedimentary cover. The sea floor exhibits increasing numbers of knolls and seamounts as we move seaward toward the mid-ocean ridge (Figure 3-1) because the sedimentary cover is increasing thinner. Oceanic ridges (Figure 3-1) - volcanic in origin - form mountain chains that extend throughout of the world ocean basins. The oceanic ridge crest is formed by a pair of the highest peaks that bracket the narrow rift valley that marks the axis of the ocean ridge (Figure 3-1). The mid-ocean ridge is composed of offset segments, which are defined by a pairs of transform faults (Figure4 September 2007 MAR 110 Lab 3: Ex 1-3 - PT 33-3). The rock in the region of a transform fault is under extreme stress and thus periodically fractures. The rocks on either side of the fault slide past each other in opposite directions creating a fracture zone or band of distorted and broken rocks. The transform faults together with their associated fracture zones appear as gashes or scars that run perpendicular to the oceanic ridge rift valleys (see Figures 3-3 and 3-4). These fracture zone scars become gradually more obscured by sediments the further one moves away from the ocean ridge. Oceanic trenches are another of the prominent feature of the ocean sea floor not shown in these particular pictures. These very deep, long, narrow, relatively steep-sided depressions in the ocean basin usually occur around the rims of ocean basins. Volcanism is not unusual in the region of deep ocean trenches. 3-2. PHYSIOGRAPHIC MAPS Physiographic maps provide a three-dimensional perspective view of a region. An example in Figure 3-4 is of the sea floor bathymetry of the western Pacific Ocean basin. Note that the variation in the vertically-exaggerated elevation of the sea floor features is indicated by differences in shading. In the next section, the geologic processes responsible for these features are discussed.4 September 2007 MAR 110 Lab 3: Ex 1-3 - PT 4 Figure 3-4. Physiographic Map of the Pacific Ocean basin.4 September 2007 MAR 110 Lab 3: Ex 1-3 - PT 53-3. PLATE TECTONICS Plate tectonics is the dynamic response of the Earth’s surface crust to the processes deep within the Earth that facilitate the upward escape of heat generated within. The ocean basin bathymetric features that we actually observe are the result of the competition between plate tectonics and sedimentation. Plate tectonic processes involve the creation, movement and destruction of the Earth’s crust – all of which tend to produce sharp, jagged crustal features. But these features are partially or fully buried by a rain of small sediment particles – a mixture of inorganic particles produced by weathering of terrestrial rocks and organic particles produced by oceanic biology. Because the sea floor is 10s to 100s of millions of years old, the sedimentary processes have the time to build-up sediment layers that smooth and even bury the jagged features. Next we explore the plate tectonic processes that produce the jagged features of the ocean sea floor. The heat escapes from the Earth’s interior through a set of highly-organized convection cell flows of the semi-solid (i.e. plastic) rock material of the asthenosphere (Figure 3-5). This upwelling molten rock called magma divides under the mid-ocean ridge, each branch going in opposite directions under the mid ocean ridge. The oceanic ridge crest system is a bathymetric high because the whole system is hotter and thus less dense than the rest of the ocean sea floor. Figure 3-5 Cross-section of a hypothetical section of the


View Full Document
Download Ocean Basin Physiography & Plate Tectonics
Our administrator received your request to download this document. We will send you the file to your email shortly.
Loading Unlocking...
Login

Join to view Ocean Basin Physiography & Plate Tectonics and access 3M+ class-specific study document.

or
We will never post anything without your permission.
Don't have an account?
Sign Up

Join to view Ocean Basin Physiography & Plate Tectonics 2 2 and access 3M+ class-specific study document.

or

By creating an account you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms Of Use

Already a member?