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Anton Dohrn Seamount

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Summit depth
  
600 metres

Location
  
North Atlantic Ocean

Type
  
Guyot

Height
  
1,500 m

Country
  
United Kingdom (EEZ)

Last eruption
  
~40 million years

Anton Dohrn Seamount httpsiytimgcomvitRP5T52SPo0hqdefaultjpg

The Anton Dohrn Seamount is a guyot in the Rockall Trough in the northeast Atlantic. It was named after the German fishery research vessel which discovered it at the end of the 1950s which, in turn, had been named after the 19th-century biologist Anton Dohrn.

Contents

Map of Anton Dohrn Seamount

The feature rises from approximately 2,100 metres to 600 metres below sea level and has a sedimentary layer approximately 100 metres thick. It arose through episodic volcanic activity between 70 and 40 million years ago.

Around the base of the seamount is a slight "moat" where the sea-bottom is at a lower depth than the surrounding terrain.

Releasing their findings in August 2016, the Deep Links project team, a collaboration between Plymouth University, the University of Oxford, the Joint Nature Conservation Committee and the British Geological Survey, spent six weeks at sea onboard the RSS James Cook deploying robot submersibles to film, photograph and collect samples from an exceptionally diverse coral reef environment now revealed on the top of the plateau-like seamount.

Anton dohrn seamount


References

Anton Dohrn Seamount Wikipedia


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