enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Seamount - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seamount

    A seamount is a large submarine landform that rises from the ocean floor without reaching the water surface (), and thus is not an island, islet, or cliff-rock.Seamounts are typically formed from extinct volcanoes that rise abruptly and are usually found rising from the seafloor to 1,000–4,000 m (3,300–13,100 ft) in height.

  3. Hawaiian–Emperor seamount chain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hawaiian–Emperor_seamount...

    The Hawaiian–Emperor seamount chain is a mostly undersea mountain range in the Pacific Ocean that reaches above sea level in Hawaii.It is composed of the Hawaiian ridge, consisting of the islands of the Hawaiian chain northwest to Kure Atoll, and the Emperor Seamounts: together they form a vast underwater mountain region of islands and intervening seamounts, atolls, shallows, banks and reefs ...

  4. Guyot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guyot

    Seamounts provide data on movements of tectonic plates on which they ride, and on the rheology of the underlying lithosphere. The trend of a seamount chain traces the direction of motion of the lithospheric plate over a more or less fixed heat source in the underlying asthenosphere, the part of the Earth's mantle beneath the lithosphere. [7]

  5. Ocean island basalt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ocean_island_basalt

    In the ocean basins, ocean island basalts form seamounts, [3] and in some cases, enough material is erupted that the rock protrudes from the ocean and forms an island, like at Hawaii, Samoa, and Iceland. Over time, however, thermal subsidence and mass loss via subaerial erosion causes islands to become completely submarine seamounts or guyots.

  6. List of seamounts in the Southern Ocean - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_seamounts_in_the...

    A seamount is a mountain rising from the ocean seafloor that does not reach to the water's surface (sea level), and thus is not an island, islet or Cliff-rock. Seamounts are typically formed from extinct volcanoes that rise abruptly and are usually found rising from the seafloor to 1,000–4,000 m (3,300–13,100 ft) in height.

  7. Vema Seamount - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vema_Seamount

    [1] [2] Vema was one of the first seamounts to be the subject of scientific study, [4] and the first seamount investigated by scuba divers without special equipment. [5] It lies in international waters [ 6 ] and its summit is so shallow that it is a navigation hazard to ships.

  8. Resolution Guyot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resolution_Guyot

    Resolution Guyot (formerly known as Huevo) is a guyot (tablemount) in the underwater Mid-Pacific Mountains in the Pacific Ocean. It is a circular flat mountain, rising 500 metres (1,600 ft) above the seafloor to a depth of about 1,320 metres (4,330 ft), with a 35-kilometre-wide (22-mile) summit platform.

  9. Discovery Seamounts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discovery_Seamounts

    The Discovery Seamounts are a group of 12 seamounts [5] 850 kilometres (530 mi) east of Gough Island [2] and southwest from Cape Town. [6] The seamounts are more than 4 kilometres (2.5 mi) high [7] and reach a minimum depth of 426 metres (1,398 ft) [8] or 389 metres (1,276 ft), [9] typically 394–400 metres (1,293–1,312 ft) [10] or 400–500 metres (1,300–1,600 ft).