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ocean trench

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ocean trench

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Profile of an ocean floor. The ocean trench is the deepest part of the ocean and the abyssal plains constitute most of the ocean bed.

Submarine valley. Ocean trenches are characterized by the presence of a volcanic arc on the concave side of the trench. Trenches are now known to be related to subduction zones, places where a plate of oceanic lithosphere dives beneath another plate of either oceanic or continental lithosphere. Ocean trenches are found around the edge of the Pacific Ocean and the northeastern Indian Ocean; minor ones occur in the Caribbean and near the Falkland Islands.

Ocean trenches represent the deepest parts of the ocean floor, the deepest being the Mariana Trench which has a depth of 11,034 m/36,201 ft. At depths of below 6 km/3.6 mi there is no light and very high pressure; ocean trenches are inhabited by crustaceans, coelenterates (for example, sea anemones), polychaetes (a type of worm), molluscs, and echinoderms.



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Ocean Trench is also a lovely song, combining dainty vocal harmonies with a foot-tapping beat and guitar line.
The part of the subduction zone which is close to New Caledonia is marked by the New Hebrides ocean trench.
In other areas of the world, this type of motion, called subduction, carves a deep ocean trench.
 
 
 
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