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Seamounts:
Biodiversity and Fisheries
Inferences of Potential Seamount
Locations from Mid-Resolution Bathymetric Data
Adrian Kitchingman and Sherman Lai
Fisheries Centre, University of British Columbia
Abstract
Seamounts are underwater volcanoes that did not grow tall enough to
break to the sea surface and turn into islands. Once formed, seamounts
tend to gradually sink under their own weight and the subsidence of
the lithosphere. The ocean floor is littered with these former seamounts,
here called seamounds. Seamounts occur throughout the world's
oceans, but their number (which may surpass 50,000) is difficult to
estimate, even roughly, because it depends on the resolution of the
bathymetric map used and the specific definition of a seamount used,
i.e., the limits used to distinguish between seamounts and seamounds.
Here, the locations of a subset of the seamounts of the world were identified
using two algorithms relying on the depth differences between adjacent
cells of a digital global elevation map distributed by the U.S. National
Oceanographic and Atmospheric Agency (NOAA). The overlap of both algorithms
resulted in a set of about 14,000 seamounts, but a different number
would have been found had we used different thresholds. Known seamount
locations supplied by NOAA and SeamountsOnline (http://seamounts.sdsc.edu)
were compared against the corresponding seamounts located by the study,
which led to some degree of ground-truthing. The coordinates of the
seamounts identified in this study are available on the CD-ROM attached
to this report, and on http://www.seaaroundus.org.
Full
text (PDF)
Appendix Location
of > 14,000 likely seamounts
Table
of Contents
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