Deep Sea Floor Mapping
By conducting a multibeam sonar survey similar to a medical ultrasound scientists are able to image the sea bottom.
Deep sea floor mapping. Huge trenches walls flatlands and seamounts fill the seascape and have a direct impact on the water bodies above them. What lies beneath the deep blue sea. The process that continually adds new material to the ocean floor is seafloor spreading and the continental slope. By the 1920s the coast and geodetic survey an ancestor of the national oceanic and atmospheric administration s national ocean service was using sonar to map deep water.
The following features are shown at example depths to scale though each feature has a considerable range at which it may occur. We re working to put our seafloor on the map through continuous data collection. In recent years satellite images show a very clear mapping of the seabed and are used extensively in the study and exploration of the ocean floor. Mapping the ocean floor.
These systems provided the databases to construct the first real maps of important features such as the deep sea trenches and mid ocean ridges. Lamont oceanographers marie tharp and bruce heezen created the first comprehensive map of the world s ocean beds. In 1957 the publication of heezen and tharp s physiographic map of the north atlantic was the first map of the seafloor that allowed the general public to begin to visualize the ocean floor. The results that let this new marvelously detailed map of the seafloor from nasa s earth observatory be made were.
The first modern breakthrough in sea floor mapping came with the use of underwater sound projectors called sonar which was first used in world war i. Seabed contains several hundred years worth of cobalt and nickel. Continental shelf 300 feet continental slope 300 10 000 feet abyssal plain 10 000 feet abyssal hill 3 000 feet up from the abyssal plain seamount 6 000 feet. So much more than you might think.
Much of australia s vast ocean territory is unknown with less than 25 per cent of it mapped to a modern standard. Lamont scientists have long been at the forefront of ocean floor mapping. Data collected by satellites and remote sensing instruments were used to created a model at least twice as. This graphic shows several ocean floor features on a scale from 0 35 000 feet below sea level.