Deep Seafloor Definition
Seafloor synonyms seafloor pronunciation seafloor translation english dictionary definition of seafloor.
Deep seafloor definition. The ground that is at the bottom of the sea see the full definition for seafloor in the english language learners dictionary. Relatively little is known about life on the antarctic seafloor. Some features like canyons and seamounts might look familiar while others such as hydrothermal vents and methane seeps are unique to the deep. At the deep sea trenches two plates converge with one plate sliding down under the other into the mantle where it is melted.
This graphic shows several ocean floor features on a scale from 0 35 000 feet below sea level. The deep ocean bottom is continually renewed through seafloor spreading see seafloor spreading hypothesis. The organisms in this zone are sometimes referred to as intraterrestrials. American heritage dictionary of the english language fifth edition.
The solid surface underlying a sea or an ocean. Oceanic crust is created at the mid oceanic ridges as a consequence of extrusive igneous activity and moves away carrying along overlying sediments. English language learners definition of seafloor. On continents it is below a few meters not including soils.
This is generally about a meter or more below the surface. For the seafloor an operational definition of deep subsurface is the region that is not bioturbated by animals. A combination of deep water ice. The seafloor was mapped by shipborne magnetometers in the 1950s and produced puzzling results sequential zones of normal and reverse magnetic polarity spreading out from the oceanic ridges.
The bottom of a sea or ocean. Later theories showed that this was due to the reversing nature of earth s magnetic field. For this reason scientists once assumed that life would be sparse in the deep ocean but virtually every probe has revealed that on the contrary life is abundant in the deep o. Examples of how to use seafloor in a sentence from the cambridge dictionary labs.
Thus for each segment of new ocean floor created at the ridges an equal amount of old oceanic crust is destroyed at the trenches or so called subduction zones.