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6.2: A Few Words About “Seafloor”

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    31625
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    Before we go any further in this chapter, I’d like to make clear a couple things about the term “seafloor.” It’s not as simple as it sounds.

    First, “sea” typically refers to the waters of the ocean. From this we might conclude that the ocean ends at the seafloor. However, seawater actually penetrates the seafloor, creating a region known as the subseafloor environment. We can’t be certain, but there’s evidence the subseafloor environment may extend as deep as a mile or more beneath the seafloor (Ciobanu et al. 2014; D’Hondt et al. 2019; Heuer et al. 2020). So while we casually think of the ocean as the seawater between the surface and the top of the seafloor, in truth, part of the ocean—and perhaps all of it on geologic timescales—circulates beneath the seafloor.

    Second, and perhaps more important, we typically think of a floor as something that is flat, horizontal, or level. But where the sea’s “floor” is concerned, nothing could be further from the truth. The seafloor is rough on nearly every scale you can think of. As Pizer (1967) comments:

    Oceanographers displayed little imagination when they chose “ocean floor” as the designation for the bottom of the world’s 140 million square miles of salt water. . . . The forces that created the ocean floor laid out the wildest roller coaster ride imaginable.

    In truth, the seafloor is as varied as the surface of the continents, if not more so. The seafloor hosts mountains and trenches and a whole bunch of other geologic features. You’ll get a good workout should you decide to walk across it.


    This page titled 6.2: A Few Words About “Seafloor” is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by W. Sean Chamberlin, Nicki Shaw, and Martha Rich (Blue Planet Publishing) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.