The floor of the atlantic has an average depth of c 12 000 ft 3 660 m.
Atlantic ocean floor features.
The outstanding feature of the atlantic floor is the mid atlantic ridge an immense median mountain range extending throughout the length of the atlantic claiming the centre third of the ocean bed and reaching roughly 1 000 miles 1 600 km in breadth.
This graphic shows several ocean floor features on a scale from 0 35 000 feet below sea level.
Arctic ocean seafloor features map.
18 1 the topography of the sea floor we examined the topography of the sea floor from the perspective of plate tectonics in chapter 10 but here we are going to take another look at the important features from an oceanographic perspective.
It separates the old world from the new world the atlantic ocean occupies an elongated s shaped basin extending longitudinally between europe and africa to the east.
Part of the floor c 3 000 ft 910 m deep is known as telegraph plateau because of the network of cables laid there.
It covers approximately 20 percent of earth s surface and about 29 percent of its water surface area.
A shallow submarine ridge across the strait of gibraltar separates the.
The northwest passage is a sea route that connects the pacific ocean to the atlantic ocean across the northern.
Explorations after 1950 revealed the true complex nature of the ocean floor.
The following features are shown at example depths to scale though each feature has a considerable range at which it may occur.
Each country receives exclusive economic rights to any natural resource that is present on or beneath the sea floor out to a distance of 200 nautical miles beyond their natural shorelines.
The atlantic ocean is the second largest of the world s oceans with an area of about 106 460 000 km 2 41 100 000 sq mi.
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.
Arctic ocean arctic ocean topography of the ocean floor.
From the late 19th century when the norwegian explorer fridtjof nansen first discovered an ocean in the central arctic until the middle of the 20th century it was believed that the arctic ocean was a single large basin.