enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Deep-sea wood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deep-sea_wood

    Deep-sea wood is the term for wood which sinks to the ocean floor. These wood-falls develop deep sea ecosystems. Deep-sea wood supports unique forms of deep sea community life including chemo-synthetic bacteria. Sources of carbon for these deep sea ecosystems are not limited to sunken wood, but also include kelp and the remains of whales. Much ...

  3. Propagating rift - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Propagating_rift

    Graphical geometry of a propagating rift. Red arrow indicates spreading direction. A propagating rift is a seafloor feature associated with spreading centers at mid-ocean ridges and back-arc basins. [1] They are more commonly observed on faster rate spreading centers (50 mm/year or more). [2]

  4. Driftwood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Driftwood

    According to Norse mythology, the first humans, Ask and Embla, were formed out of two pieces of driftwood, an ash and an elm, by the god Odin and his brothers, Vili and Vé. [1] The Vikings would cast wood into the sea before making landfall. The location of the wood would be an indication as to where to build their mead halls.

  5. Marine sediment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_sediment

    Marine sediment, or ocean sediment, or seafloor sediment, are deposits of insoluble particles that have accumulated on the seafloor.These particles either have their origins in soil and rocks and have been transported from the land to the sea, mainly by rivers but also by dust carried by wind and by the flow of glaciers into the sea, or they are biogenic deposits from marine organisms or from ...

  6. Rift - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rift

    Accommodation zones may be located where older crustal structures intersect the rift axis. In the Gulf of Suez rift, the Zaafarana accommodation zone is located where a shear zone in the Arabian-Nubian Shield meets the rift. [6] Rift flanks or shoulders are elevated areas around rifts. Rift shoulders are typically about 70 km wide. [7]

  7. Seafloor spreading - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seafloor_spreading

    Earlier theories by Alfred Wegener and Alexander du Toit of continental drift postulated that continents in motion "plowed" through the fixed and immovable seafloor. The idea that the seafloor itself moves and also carries the continents with it as it spreads from a central rift axis was proposed by Harold Hammond Hess from Princeton University and Robert Dietz of the U.S. Naval Electronics ...

  8. Geology of the Pacific Ocean - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geology_of_the_Pacific_Ocean

    The Pacific Ocean evolved in the Mesozoic from the Panthalassic Ocean, which had formed when Rodinia rifted apart around 750 Ma. The first ocean floor which is part of the current Pacific plate began 160 Ma to the west of the central Pacific and subsequently developed into the largest oceanic plate on Earth.

  9. Marine debris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_debris

    Marine debris is found on the floor of the Arctic ocean. [23] Although an increasing number of studies have been focused on plastic debris accumulation on the coasts, in off-shore surface waters, and that ingested by marine organisms that live in the upper levels of the water column, there is limited information on debris in the mesopelagic and ...