chapter 16 the marine environment. the shore the shore is the area of land between the low tide and...

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Chapter 16 The Marine Environment

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Page 1: Chapter 16 The Marine Environment. The Shore The shore is the area of land between the low tide and area affected by storm waves

Chapter 16

The Marine Environment

Page 2: Chapter 16 The Marine Environment. The Shore The shore is the area of land between the low tide and area affected by storm waves

The Shore

• The shore is the area of land between the low tide and area affected by storm waves.

Page 3: Chapter 16 The Marine Environment. The Shore The shore is the area of land between the low tide and area affected by storm waves

Erosional Shoreline Features

• Headlands are eroded by wave action to produce wave cut platforms

Page 4: Chapter 16 The Marine Environment. The Shore The shore is the area of land between the low tide and area affected by storm waves

Longshore Currents

• Longshore currents move large amounts of sediments along the shore.

Page 5: Chapter 16 The Marine Environment. The Shore The shore is the area of land between the low tide and area affected by storm waves

Depositional Shoreline Features

• Seashores are in a constant state of change. Sediments are moved and deposited by longshore currents

Page 6: Chapter 16 The Marine Environment. The Shore The shore is the area of land between the low tide and area affected by storm waves

Human Impacts

• Humans modify the shoreline to try to control beach erosion

Page 7: Chapter 16 The Marine Environment. The Shore The shore is the area of land between the low tide and area affected by storm waves

Use of groins to control erosion

Page 8: Chapter 16 The Marine Environment. The Shore The shore is the area of land between the low tide and area affected by storm waves

Changes in Sea Level

• Climate change caused by global warming is causing sea levels to rise:– Thermal expansion: global temperature increases,

causing seawater to heat up and expand, leads to rising sea level

– Melting glaciers adds to ocean volume

• Tectonic forces (uplift and sinking) can affect sea level in local areas

Page 9: Chapter 16 The Marine Environment. The Shore The shore is the area of land between the low tide and area affected by storm waves

Seafloor Features

• Continental margin: where continent meets ocean

Page 10: Chapter 16 The Marine Environment. The Shore The shore is the area of land between the low tide and area affected by storm waves

Continental Margin

• Continental shelf: average depth 130 meters; width can vary from a few to hundreds of kilometers

• Continental slope: the true edge of the continent; deep submarine canyons

• Continental rise: the base of the continental slope

Page 11: Chapter 16 The Marine Environment. The Shore The shore is the area of land between the low tide and area affected by storm waves

Deep-Ocean Basins

Page 12: Chapter 16 The Marine Environment. The Shore The shore is the area of land between the low tide and area affected by storm waves

Deep-Ocean Basins

• Abyssal plains: flat parts of the ocean floor• Deep-sea trenches: deepest parts of the

ocean, created by ocean plates sliding under other plates

• Mid-ocean ridges: undersea mountain ranges, created by two plates being pushed apart

• Other features: seamounts, guyots, hydrothermal vents

Page 13: Chapter 16 The Marine Environment. The Shore The shore is the area of land between the low tide and area affected by storm waves

Marine Sediments

• Terrigenous (deep-sea mud): originates on land

• Biogenous (oozes): forms from living organisms

• Hydrogenous: elements that precipitate directly from seawater. Ex: manganese nodules