- Source: Bellingshausen Sea
The Bellingshausen Sea is an area along the west side of the Antarctic Peninsula between 57°18'W and 102°20'W, west of Alexander Island, east of Cape Flying Fish on Thurston Island, and south of Peter I Island (there the southern Vostokkysten). The Bellingshausen Sea borders the Eights Coast, the Bryan Coast, and the west part of the English Coast. To the west of Cape Flying Fish it joins the Amundsen Sea.
Bellingshausen Sea has an area of 487,000 km2 (188,000 sq mi) and reaches a maximum depth of 4.5 kilometers (2.8 mi). It contains the undersea plain Bellingshausen Plain.
The Antarctic Slope Current (ASC) is thought to originate in the Bellingshausen Sea as the result of a density front at the shelf break, rather than being wind-driven.
It takes its name from Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen, who explored in the area in 1821.
In the late Pliocene Epoch, about 2.15 million years ago, the Eltanin asteroid (about 1-4 km in diameter) impacted at the edge of the Bellingshausen sea (at the Southern Ocean). This is the only known impact in a deep-ocean basin in the world.
References
This article incorporates public domain material from "Bellingshausen Sea". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey.
External links
NASA Bellinghausen Sea satellite photo
Bellinghausen Sea climatological low pressure system
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Laut Bellingshausen
- Tanjung Flying Fish
- Laut Amundsen
- Laut Lazarev
- Laut Kaspia
- Laut Utara
- Laut Raja Haakon VII
- Laut Natuna Utara
- Samudra Selatan
- Sejarah Antarktika
- Bellingshausen Sea
- Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen
- List of seas on Earth
- Bellingshausen
- Caspian Sea
- October 2022 Southern Ocean cyclone
- Aral Sea
- Mediterranean seas
- Sargasso Sea
- Arabian Sea