Oceanography - The Deep Sea
the Trieste
A bathyscaphe which descended to the bottom of the Marianas Trench at 35,840 ft. deep (psi = 15,979) (atm = 1086)
thermocline
A narrow stratum of rapid temperature change in the top 1000 m of the ocean
chemosynthesis
Process by which some organisms, such as certain bacteria, use chemical energy to produce carbohydrates
William Beebe and Otis Barton
used bathysphere to observe marine life off bermuda, they were the first ocean explorers to go deeper than light penetrated
James Cameron
1st human to reach the 11,000 m Marianas Trench solo in a submersible
mid-ocean ridge
An underwater moutain chain where new ocean floor is formed
hydrothermal vent
Form along mid-ocean ridges, and are zones where mineral, rich hot water escapes through cracks in ocean crust and into the surrounding water
abyssal zone
Lies below 2000 meters and is in complete darkness and uniform cold, the bottom for much of the ocean
hydrogenous sediments
Sea-floor sediments, such as manganese nodules, that form when chemical reactions cause minerals to crystallize from seawater
Mariana Trench
The deepest part of the world's oceans located in the western Pacific. It has a depth of 11,034 meters.
epipelagic
The pelagic environment from the surface to 200 m. Plenty of sunlight to promote photosynthesis.
mesopelagic
The twilight zone of the ocean, minimal light, oxygen minimum zone, and rapidly changing conditions.
continental shelf
a gently sloping , shallow area that extends outward from the edge of each continent
blob fish
a great example of a squishy, mushy, or gelatinous deep sea species
abyssal plain
a smooth, nearly flat region of the deep ocean floor
continental slope
a steep incline of the ocean floor leading down from the edge of the continental shelf to the abyssal plain
seamount
an underwater mountain rising above the ocean floor
bathypelagic
below 1000 meters, uniformly cold and dark, lacks any hard surfaces
lithogenous sediments
from land, transported to ocean by water, wind, ice, gravity
oxygen minimum zone
region in ocean below photic zone with depletion of oxygen where most decay/respiration happens
manganese nodules
round mineral formations that contain high concentrations of manganese, iron, copper, nickel, and cobalt
biogenous sediments
sediments formed from the remains of living organisms; shells, skeletal parts, coral, fecal pellets
hadopelagic zone
the deepest parts of the ocean, found only in deep sea trenches
calcite compensation depth
the depth in the oceans below which the rate of supply of calcite (calcium carbonate) disappears, organisms lack hard shells and are often gelatinous instead
bioluminescence
the production of light by living things, in the deep sea it is often use defensively or for camoflage