Online Encyclopedia

CONTINENTAL SHELF

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 30 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CONTINENTAL SHELF  , the
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term in
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physical geography for the submerged platform upon which a continent or island stands in
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relief . If a coin or medal be partly sunk under
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water the image and superscription will stand above water and represent a continent with adjacent islands; the sunken
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part just sub-merged will represent the
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continental shelf and the edge of the coin the boundary between it and the surrounding deep, called by Professor H . K . H . Wagner the continental slope . If the lithosphere
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surface be divided into three parts, namely, the continent heights, the ocean depths, and the transitional
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area separating them, it will be found that this transitional area is almost bisected by the coast-
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line, that nearly one-
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half of it (ro,000,000 sq. m.) lies under water less than zoo fathoms deep, and the remainder 12,000,000 sq. m. is under 600 ft. in
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elevation . .There are thus two continuous plain systems, one above water and one under water, and the second of these is called the continental shelf . It represents the area which would be added to the
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land surface if the sea fell 600 ft . This shelf varies in width . Round Africa—except to the south—and off the western coasts of
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America it scarcely exists . It is wide under the
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British Islands and extends as a continuous platform under the North Sea, down the
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English Channel to the south of France; it unites
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Australia to New
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Guinea .on the north and to
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Tasmania on the south, connects the
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Malay
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Archipelago along the broad shelf east of
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China with
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Japan, unites north-western America with
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Asia, sweeps in a symmetrical curve outwards from north-eastern America towards Greenland, curving downwards outside
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Newfoundland and holding Hudson
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Bay in the centre of a shallow dish . In many places it represents the land planed down by
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wave'
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action to a plain of marine denudation, where the waves have battered down the cliffs and dragged the material under water .

If there were no compensating action in the

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differential
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movement of land and sea in the transitional area, the whole of the land would be gradually planed down to a submarine platform, and all the globe would be covered with water . There are, however, periodical warpings of this transitional area by which fresh areas of land are raised above sea-level, and fresh continental coast-lines produced, while the sea tends to sink more deeply into the
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great ocean basins, so that the continents ' slowly increase in
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size . "In many cases it is possible that the continental shelf is the end of a low plain submerged by subsidence; in others a low plain may be an upheaved continental shelf, and probably wave action is only one of the factors at
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work " (H . R . Mill, '
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Realm of Nature, 1897) .

End of Article: CONTINENTAL SHELF
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CONTINUED FRACTIONS

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