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Anton Dohrn Seamount: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 57°30′N 11°00′W / 57.500°N 11.000°W / 57.500; -11.000
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m [[Exclusive Economic Zone]
an extinct volcano is not a type of volcano
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| Coordinates = {{coord|57|30|N|11|00|W |type:mountain |display=title,inline}}
| Coordinates = {{coord|57|30|N|11|00|W |type:mountain |display=title,inline}}
| Country = [[United Kingdom]] ([[Exclusive Economic Zone|EEZ]])
| Country = [[United Kingdom]] ([[Exclusive Economic Zone|EEZ]])
| Type = extinct [[volcano]]
| Type = [[Guyot]]
| Volcanic group =
| Volcanic group =
| Age =
| Age =

Revision as of 20:57, 5 May 2008

The Anton Dohrn Seamount is a guyot in the Rockall Trough in the northeast Atlantic. It was named after the ship which discovered it which, in turn, had been named after the nineteenth century biologist Anton Dohrn.

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.[1]

References

  1. ^ O'Connor, Stofferes, Wijbrans, Shannon and Morrissey (2000). Evidence from episodic seamount volcanism for pulsing of the Iceland plume in the past 70 Myr, Nature 408, 954-958.