Title: Origin of the Ocean
1The Sea FloorPhysical Geology, Chapter 18
- Origin of the Ocean
- Methods of Studying the Sea Floor
- Continental Shelves Continental Slopes
- Submarine Canyons
- Passive Continental Margins
- Active Continental Margins
- Mid-Oceanic Ridges
- Fracture Zones
- Seamounts, Guyots Aseismic Ridges
- Reefs
- Sediments of the Sea Floor
- Oceanic Crust Ophiolites
- The Age of the Sea Floor
- The Sea Floor Plate Tectonics
form?
2Origin of the Ocean
- Early formation 4 b.y.
- Degassing of Earths interior
- Comet impacts
3Methods of Studying the Sea Floor
- Rock samples
- Rock Dredge
- Corer
- Sea Floor Drilling
- Submersibles
- Echo Sounder
- Multibeam Sonar
- Sidescan Sonar
- Seismic Reflection Profiler
- Magnetic Surveys
- Gravity Surveys
- Seismic Refraction Surveys
4Features of the Sea Floor
- Passive continental margin (Fig. 18.5)
- Continental shelf
- Continental slope
- Continental rise
- Abyssal Plain
- Active continental margin (Fig. 18.5)
- Continental shelf
- Continental slope
- Trench
- Mid-Oceanic Ridge
- Seamounts
- Fracture Zones
- Submarine canyons
- Aseismic ridges
5Continental Shelves Continental Slopes
- Continental shelf shallow, submarine platform,
0.1º seaward dip - Continental slope 4-5º steep slope from a depth
of 100-200 m at edge of continental shelf
6Submarine Canyons
- Submarine canyons V-shaped valleys that run
across continental shelves slopes - Abyssal fans fan-shaped deposits of sediment at
base of submarine canyons - Turbidity currents masses of sediment-laden
water pulled downhill by gravity
7Passive Continental Margins
- Passive continental margin
- Continental shelf, continental slope, and
continental rise. - Extends to abyssal plain at 5 km depth.
- Continental rise at base of continental slope,
wedge of sediment from continental slope to
deep-sea floor, slopes 0.5º.
8Passive Continental MarginsContinental Rise
Types of deposition
- Turbidity currents flowing down slope
- Contour currents flowing along slope
9Passive Continental MarginsAbyssal Plains
- Abyssal plains
- Very flat regions at base of continental rise.
- Composed of horizontal sediment layers probably
deposited by turbidity currents. - Flattest features on the Earth.
10Active Continental Margins
- Active continental margin
- Earthquakes, young mountain belt, and volcanoes.
- Consists of continental shelf slope, and
oceanic trench. - Lacks continental rise and abyssal plain.
- Associated with convergent plate boundaries.
11Active Continental MarginsOceanic Trenches
- Oceanic trench
- Narrow, deep trough parallel to edge of continent
or island arc - Continental slope steepens to 10-15º
- Benioff seismic zone
- Volcanoes landward
- Low heat flow
- Negative gravity anomaly
12Mid-Oceanic Ridges
- Mid-oceanic ridge
- Undersea mountain range
- Basalt
- 80,000 km long
- 1500-2500 km wide
- 2-3 km above ocean floor
- Rift Valley
- Crust extension
- Along ridge crest
- 1-2 km deep
- Several km wide
- Present in Atlantic Indian Ocean, absent in
Pacific Ocean
13Mid-Oceanic RidgesGeologic Biologic Activity
at the Ridges
- Geologic Activity at the Ridges
- Shallow focus (0-20 km) earthquakes
- High heat flow decreasing away from the ridge
- Basaltic eruptions
- Hot springs (Black smokers)
- Biologic Activity at the Ridges
- Mussels
- Crabs
- Starfish
- Giant white clams
- Giant tube worms
- Thermophilic bacteria
14Europe
15India
16North America
- Fracture zones
- Major lines of weakness of the Earths crust
- Cross MOR at right angles
- Rift valley is offset
- May extend onto continents
17South America
- Seamounts
- Conical undersea mountains that rise 1000 m above
the sea floor - Some are islands
- 10,000 in W. Pacific
18Seamounts, Guyots, Aseismic Ridges
- Guyots Flattopped seamounts
- Aseismic ridges Submarine ridges not associated
with earthquakes.
19Reefs
- Reefs
- Wave resistant ridges of coral, algae, other
calcareous organisms - Warm, shallow, sunlit, clean water
- Reef types
- Fringing reefs Flat table-like, attached
directly to shore - Barrier reefs parallel to shore, detached by
lagoons - Atolls Circular reefs rimming lagoons,
surrounded by deep water
20Sediments of the Sea Floor
- Basaltic oceanic crust
- Terrigenous sediment
- Land-derived sediment.
- Turbidity contour currents
- Pelagic sediment
- Fine-grained clay skeletons of microscopic
organisms. - Absent on ridge crests.
21Oceanic Crust Ophiolites
- Oceanic crust is thinner (7 km) and denser (3.3
g/cm3) than continental crust. - Layer 1 Marine sediment (variable thickness
composition). - Layer 2 1.5 km, pillow basalts overlaying basalt
dikes (closely spaced, parallel, vertical). - Layer 3 5 km sill-like gabbros.
- Ophiolite Slivers of oceanic crust emplaced on
land represented by distinctive rock sequences
22Oceanic Crust Ophiolites
- Pillow basalt from a northern California ophiolite
23The Age of the Sea FloorThe Sea Floor and
Plate Tectonics
- The age of the sea floor
- Younger than 200 m.y.
- The sea floor plate tectonics
- Origin of most sea floor features related to
plate tectonics (Chapter 19)
24End of Chapter 18