Unit 3- marine provinces and marine sediments
Most abundant features-
Abyssal hills or sea knolls
Passive margins have well developed-
Abyssal plains
Convergent active margins rarely have-
Abyssal plains bc the trenches act as gutters that trap sediment moved by turbidity currents
Greatest quantity of lithogenous sediment is found-
Around the margins of the continents where it is constantly moved by high energy currents along the shoreline and in deeper turbidity currents
Active margins-
Associated with lithospheric plate boundaries and have all of tectonic activity
Ocean floor can be divided into what 3 provinces
Continental margins, deep-ocean basins, and mid-ocean ridges
Types of active margins-
Convergent and transform
Passive margins-
Embedded within the interior of lithospheric plates, aren't close to any plate boundary. Lack tectonic activity
Abyssal Plains formed by
Fine particles of sediment slowly drifting onto the deep-ocean floor. Over millions of years a thick blanket of sediment is produced by suspension settling.
Continental shelf-
Flat zone extending from the shore to the shelf break
Pelagic deposits-
Found in deep-ocean basins; fine grained
Neritic deposits-
Found on continental shelves and shallow water near Islands; coarse grained
Continental borderland-
Land marked by a high degree of relief (islands, shallow banks, deep basins)
Continental slope-
Lies beyond shelf break, where the deep ocean basins begin
Bathymetry-
Measurement of ocean depths and the charting of its shape(topography)
Submarine canyons-
Narrow, deep,v-shaped valleys
The pacific ring of fire-
Occurs along the margin of the Pacific Ocean, has the majority of the earths active volcanoes and earthquakes bc of the prevalence of the convergent plates boundaries along the pacific rim
Smooth, rounded lobes of rock that resemble a stack of pillows
Pillow lavas
Majority of lithogenous sediment is composed of-
Quartz (SiO2)
Hypsographic curves show-
Relationship between the height of the land and the depth of the ocean
Hydrothermal vents-
Sea floor hot springs created when cold water seeps along cracks and fractures in the ocean crust and approaches underground magma chamber
The type of soundings we hardly use is-
Seismic reflection
Continental margins-
Shallow water areas close to continents
Mid-ocean ridges-
Shallower water area near the middle of an ocean
Graded bedding-
Suspended material settles in a distinctive type of layering. Large pieces first that get progressively smaller
How are submarine canyons formed-
Turbidity currents and mass wasting (slump,slides, debris flow)
Turbidity currents-
Underwater avalanches or muddy water mixed with rocks, etc.
Types of vents-
Warm water, white smokers, black smokers
White smoker-
Water temp 30 to 350 and emit water that is white bc of light colored compounds, like barium sulfide
Black smoker-
Water temp above 350 and emit black water bc of dark colored metal sulfides like iron, nickel ,copper and zinc
Warm-water vents-
Water temp below 30 and generally emit clear water
Pillow lavas/pillow basalts occur-
When hot basaltic lava spills into the sea floor and exposed to cold seawater that chills the margins of the lava
Deep-ocean basins-
Deep water areas farther from land
Deep-sea fans/ submarine fans-
Deposits at the mouths of submarine canyons. Creates the continental rise when they merge
Lithogenous sediment-
Derived from pre existing rock material that originates on the continents or islands from erosion, volcanic emotions or blown dust
Continental rise-
Transition zone between the continental margin and the deep-ocean floor made of huge pile of debris