Open Ocean - Oceans, Coasts & Seashores (U.S. National Park Service) (2024)
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The pelagic zone, also known as the open ocean, is the area of the ocean outside of coastal areas. Here you will find some of the biggest marine life species.
Species here are affected by wave and wind activity, pressure, water temperature and prey. Since, this area spans a large distance animals have to travel far to feed. Sea turtles travel thousands of miles between breeding and feeding grounds.
Different Zones within the Pelagic Zone
The open ocean lies over the continental shelf. The seafloor is not included in the open ocean.
Epipelagic zone (ocean surface to 200 meters deep). This is the zone in which photosynthesis can occur, because light is available.
Mesopelagic zone (200-1,000m) - This is also known as the twilight zone, because light becomes limited.There is less oxygen available to organisms in this zone.
Bathypelagic zone (1,000-4,000m) - This is a dark zone where water pressure is high and the water is cold (around 35-39 degrees).
Abyssopelagic zone (4,000-6,000m) - This is the zone past the continental slope - the deep water just over the ocean bottom. This is also known as the abyssal zone.
Hadopelagic zone (deep ocean trenches, greater than 6,000m) - In some places, there are trenches that are deeper than the surrounding ocean floor. These areas are the hadopelagic zone.At a depth of over 36,000 feet, the Mariana Trench is the deepest known point in the ocean.
The open ocean lies beyond the continental shelf: extending from the Arctic to the Antarctic, from the surface down to the deepest parts of the ocean, and encompassing the entire water column. On a map it accounts for 64% of the ocean and 45% of the entire Earth.
Offering white quartz sand beaches, military forts, and wildlife sanctuaries, the largest national seashore in the U.S. is also vulnerable to hurricanes and oil spills; the region is still recovering from Hurricane Sally in 2020 and the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill.
The first 200 meters of the ocean are the open ocean. Much of the marine life we know of lives here, where there is light. Below 200 meters, where there is little light left, you enter the Twilight Zone. Once you pass 1,000 meters, the water is completely devoid of light, and you have reached the deep ocean.
These parks were established to preserve our country's greatest collection of natural, historic and cultural treasures. We invite you take a dive into the deep and explore what makes our 88 Ocean and Coastal National Parks iconic, treasured and sacred. Find your ocean & coastal parks.
Another reason for the relatively small amount of ocean we have explored is that, at great depths, exploration conditions become extreme. The so-called “sunlight zone” ends at about 200 meters below the surface, making imaging much trickier, and pressure is extremely high.
Misleading. NASA did not abruptly stop deep-sea research following the failure of a satellite in 1978. The agency continues to study the deep ocean and launched missions as recently as 2021. This article was produced by the Reuters Fact Check team.
In the Pacific Ocean, somewhere between Guam and the Philippines, lies the Marianas Trench, also known as the Mariana Trench. At 35,814 feet below sea level, its bottom is called the Challenger Deep — the deepest point known on Earth.
In the vast unproductive low- and mid-latitude ocean, warm and sunlit surface water is separated from cold, nutrient-rich interior water by a strong density difference that restricts mixing of water and thereby reduces nutrient supply, which becomes the limiting factor for productivity.
Answer and Explanation: The national parks are owned by the Federal Government. The legislative branches of the U.S. House and Senate have the power to determine the use of federal lands and can pass laws affecting the sale or preservation of those areas including national parks.
Altogether, there are 429 national park sites in the U.S., though just 63 have the "National Park" designation in their names. The others fall into several categories including National Battlefields, National Historic Sites, National Monuments, National Seashores, and National Recreation Areas.
The open ocean beyond the continental shelf (Fig. 41.1) accounts for 64% of the planet's surface. This pelagic realm has more than twice the surface area of all terrestrial biomes combined and 168 times the habitable volume.
But we don't... We have only explored five percent of our world ocean. That means that 95 percent of our ocean is unknown. Help protect our ocean by sharing what you've learned.
The open ocean lies over the continental shelf. The seafloor is not included in the open ocean. Epipelagic zone (ocean surface to 200 meters deep). This is the zone in which photosynthesis can occur, because light is available.
But while almost every inch of the land has been tracked, mapped, and photographed to the inch, the deep sea remains remarkably unknown. According to the US National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), more than eighty percent of the oceans remain unexplored.
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