Continental Margins and Ocean Basins - Cal State LA
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Transcript Continental Margins and Ocean Basins - Cal State LA
Continental Margins
and
Ocean Basins
Continental Margins
Three Main Divisions
Continental shelf
Continental slope
Continental rise
Continental Shelf
Submerged part of the continent
Slopes gently toward ocean basin
(<1°)
Composed of continental crust
Shelf ends at shelf break –
boundary between shelf and
steeper slope
Continental Slope
Extends from shelf break to rise
Boundary between continental
and oceanic crust
Steeply sloping compared to shelf
(5-25°)
Submarine canyons are major
features
Submarine Canyon
Origin of submarine canyons:
• river erosion
• turbidity currents
Submarine Canyon
Turbidity Currents
Downslope movement of dense mixture of clay, silt, sand and water
Deposits are called turbidites
Turbidites are layered and exhibit graded bedding (decrease in
sediment grain size from bottom to top)
Monterey Canyon & Hudson Canyon
•extends about 95 miles,
•terminates at Monterey fan
•reaching depths of 3,600 m
(11,800 ft).
•canyon is about 1 mile deep
•2,200 m (7,217 ft) deep at base of
continental slope.
•As much as 12 km (7.5 miles) wide (from
east rim to west rim)
Continental Rise
At base of continental slope
Slope angle decreases
Caused by the accumulation of sediment
Continental Margins
Types
Active Margin
Passive Margin
Continental Margin
Aseismic (Passive)
No plate boundary
Wide continental margin
Thick sediment
accumulation
Little tectonic activity
Continental Margin
Seismic (Active)
Convergent plate boundary
Trenches are boundaries
Narrow continental margin
Thin accumulation of
sediments
Tectonically active
Continental Margin
Passive vs. Active
Passive Margins
• Major rivers drain into ocean
• Sediment transported by
river builds out shelf
Active Margins
• Large rivers uncommon
• Irregular shelves
Southern California Seafloor
Extensive,
complex
Consist of basins
& ridges
Widest shelf in
California
NW-SE structural
grain
Active Continental Margin
Southern California
3-D shaded relief map
Seafloor instability – Santa Barbara
Basin
Active Continental Margin
Southern California
Southern California Borderland--Origin
Ocean Basin Floor
Features
Abyssal Plain
Trenches
Ridges and Rises
Seamounts and Guyots
Coral Reefs and Atolls
Ocean Basin Floor
Covers about 30% of Earth’s surface
Begins at base of continental rise
Sedimentation: Passive and turbidity currents
Contain abyssal plains, deep sea trenches, and seamounts
Ocean Basin Floor
Abyssal Plain
Flat, deep ocean floor
Depth may be 2-3 miles or more
Thick sediment accumulation covers oceanic crust
Ocean Basin Floor
Deep Sea Trenches
Occur at subduction zones
where oceanic crust is
forced downward into
mantle
Associated with earthquakes
and volcanoes
Deepest is Mariana Trench
(11,020 m)
Longest is Peru-Chile trench
(5,900 km)
Marianas Trench
Ocean Basin Floor
Ridges and Rises
Ridges = steep slopes
Rises = gentle slopes
Underwater volcanic mountain chain
• Extends for 65,000 km
• 1,000 km wide
• 1,000-2,000 m high
Contain central rift valleys
• 15-50 km wide
• 500-1,500 m deep
Offset by fractures
Ocean Basin Floor
Seamounts and Guyots
Seamounts are underwater volcanoes formed along ocean
ridges or over hot spots
May emerge as an island
May be eroded flat on top and called Guyots
Ocean Basin Floor
Coral Reefs and Atolls
Volcanic islands (from seamount) form in warm latitudes
Fringing coral reefs form in shallow, sunlit waters
Dormant volcano subsides and flattens (becomes a guyot)
Actively-growing reef becomes a barrier reef and then an atoll