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Chapter 10 The Seafloor and Continental Margins
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Observe the seafloor around Monterey Bay, California
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Observe this geologic map of the Monterey Bay area
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How We Study the Seafloor Use sound waves to map depths
Use submersibles to observe and collect rocks
Use ships to drill holes in ocean floor
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What We Can Learn from Drilling
Type of sediment or rock Fossils (age and environment)
Using fossil or isotopic ages to can get rates: rate of deposition = sediment thickness/time span
(example: 20 m/4 m.y. = 5 m/m.y.)
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Observe this seismic-reflection profile of the ocean floor and find each feature that is labeled
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Observe features that are present in mid-ocean ridges
Form a consistent sequence of rocks in oceanic crust
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Observe important features of the deep seafloor
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Observe sediment thicknesses on the ocean floor (red is thickest; white is thinnest). What settings have the thickest or thinnest sediment?
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Observe a map showing depth of the seafloor
Compare the relationship between depth and age
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Observe how flat-topped seamounts form
Eruptions of lava onto seafloor
Volcano rises above the sea as an island
Top of mountain beveled off by waves; crust cools and island subsides below sea
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Oceanic Plateaus
Kerguelen oceanic plateau
Rising mantle plume at hot spot
Submarine flood basalts pour onto seafloor
Plateau forms over several million years
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Observe the location of hot spots, linear island chains, and oceanic plateaus
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Observe the processes that form island arcs
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Observe what happens in front of and behind an island arc
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Why Are Island Arcs Curved?
Earth is a sphere, not a flat plane
More surface area on outside than at depth so a slab bends as it subducts
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Observe the location of the main island arcs
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Observe some smaller seas of the Pacific
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How the Gulf of California Formed
Stage 1: Subduction along west coast, to later become a coastal transform fault
Stage 2: Transform boundary and spreading centers jump inland, carving off Baja
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Observe how smaller seas near Eurasia formed
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Observe where coral reefs form
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Observe one way an atoll forms
Volcanic island forms, followed by formation of fringing reef
Island cools and sinks but reef continues to build upward toward light
Volcano sinks below sea level, leaving reef as atoll
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Observe the location of reefs around the world
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Observe the features and structures of continental margins
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Underwater Slope Failures
Turbidity current Graded beds
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Submarine Canyons
Turbidity currents erode into continental slope
River (due to drop in sea level during ice age) and turbidity currents eroded into continental shelf
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Observe some settings that can form evaporite deposits
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What Structures Do Evaporites Form?
Salt domes Folded layers in evaporite
Faulting and folding over weak salt layer
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Observe the setting of salt structures along the Gulf Coast of the United States. Salt is shown in black.
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200 m.y. Ago: End of Pangaea
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150 m.y. Ago: New Oceans Open
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120 m.y. Ago: Dispersal of Gondwana
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90 m.y. Ago: Atlantic Ocean Open
Gondwana continents isolated 10.11.a4
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30 m.y. Ago: Closing Tethys Sea
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Present Day
Predict what will happen in the future to each ocean
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Observe the present setting of the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean region
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Jurassic History (175 m.y. to 130 m.y. ago)
Early rifting Gulf opens
Gulf stops growing
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Cretaceous to Neogene History (84 to 5 m.y. ago)
Plateau enters Caribbean Cuban collision
Panama connection
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Investigation: How Did These Ocean Features and Continental Margins Form?
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Location of Cross Section
Location of cross section
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