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6.3: Marine Geomorphometry

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    31748
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    The World Ocean Floor Map (1977) painted by Austrian Heinrich Berann (1915—1999) under the guidance of American oceanographers Bruce Heezen (1924—1977) and Marie Tharp (1920—2006) has long served as the standard bearer for maps of the seafloor. But the emergence of new methods has given rise to a new field calleds marine geomorphometry, the quantitative study of the seafloor (see LeCours et al. 2016). Geomorphometry takes advantage of advances in satellite-derived bathymetry, geographic information systems (GIS), digital bathymetric models, and spatial analysis software to quantitatively identify and statistically analyze various features of the seafloor.

    In 2014 Australian geoscientist Peter Harris and colleagues published the first digital map of seafloor geomorphic features (Harris et al. 2014). Using quantitative tools, their analysis provides for the first time an assessment of the numbers and sizes of different seafloor features and offers new insights into the characteristics of seafloor features.


    This page titled 6.3: Marine Geomorphometry 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.