Credit: University of New Hampshire Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping/Joint Hydrographic Centre. |
Scientists
have uncovered a giant mountain in the Pacific Ocean, with the summit of the
seamount rising 1,100 meters from the 5,100-meter-deep ocean floor. The
discovery was made around 2,600 kilometres south of Hawaii.
It
was uncovered in mid-August by a research team, which was led by NOAA and
University of New Hampshire scientist, James Gardner. The team was aiming to
try and map the outer limits of the US continental shelf.
Gardner
was surveying one of least known parts of the central Pacific Ocean, which was
around 300 kilometres south east of uninhabited Jarvis Island. However, the
seamount, which has yet to be named, appeared “out of the blue.”
Three-dimensional view of the southwest side of
the seamount with 23-degree slopes (University of New Hampshire Centre for
Coastal and Ocean Mapping/Joint Hydrographic Centre)
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“These
seamounts are very common, but we don’t know about them because most of the
places that we go out and map have never been mapped before,” the researcher
said in a press release on September 2.
Since
only low-resolution satellite data exists for most of the Earth’s seafloor,
many seamounts of this size do not show up on satellite. However, advanced
multibeam echosounder missions like this one can resolve them.
“Satellites
just can’t see these features and we can,” Gardner added.
For
now it isn’t known whether the seamount could have any human use. It is too
deep (its summit lies nearly 4,000 meters beneath the surface of the ocean) to
be a navigation hazard or to provide rich fisheries.
“It’s
probably 100 million years old,” Gardner says, “and it might have something in
it we may be interested in 100 years from now.”
Credit: University of New Hampshire Center for
Coastal and Ocean Mapping/Joint Hydrographic Centre.
|
Seamounts
are formed due to volcanic activity and are normally found near plate
boundaries. However, they can also be located in the middle of plates where
there are particular hot spot areas.
While Mount Everest may
hold the record for the highest elevation on land, the tallest mountain in the
world is actually a seamount. Hawaii’s Mauna Kea, a dormant volcano, is 10,200
metres tall when measured from base to peak; Everest is 8,850 meters. Only
4,000 metres of Mauna Kea is above sea level.
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