Bellingshausen Sea: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Sea ice by fruchtzwerg's world.jpg|right|thumb|280px|The Bellingshausen Sea]]
[[File:Bellingshausen Sea shaded, with the BAT.svg|right|thumb|250px|Location of the Bellingshausen Sea shaded]]
{{territory|British Antarctic Territory}}
{{territory|British Antarctic Territory}}
The '''Bellingshausen Sea''' is a sea 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.  To the west of Cape Flying Fish it joins the Amundsen Sea.
The '''Bellingshausen Sea''' is a sea 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.  To the west of Cape Flying Fish it joins the Amundsen Sea.

Latest revision as of 20:17, 25 January 2020

The Bellingshausen Sea
Location of the Bellingshausen Sea shaded

The Bellingshausen Sea is a sea 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. To the west of Cape Flying Fish it joins the Amundsen Sea.

In the south are, from west to east, Eights Coast and Bryan Coast of Ellesworth Land and the westernmost parts of the English Coast, the latter within the British Antarctic Territory.

The Bellingshausen Sea, covering some 188,000 square miles, reaches a maximum depth of 2.8 miles,[1] and contains an undersea plain known as the 'Bellingshausen Plain'. It takes its name from Admiral Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen, the Russian admiral who explored in the area in 1821.

Geology

It is believed that in the late Pliocene Epoch, about 2.15 million years ago, an asteroid (about a mile to two and a half miles in diameter impacted at the edge of the Bellingshausen Sea. This would be the only known impact in a deep-ocean basin in the world.[2]

Outside links

References

  1. Gazetteer «About countries»: Bellingshausen (sea)
  2. Gersonde, Rainer; F. T. Kyte; T. Frederichs; U. Bleil; H.-W. Schenke; G. Kuhn (2005). "The late Pliocene impact of the Eltanin asteroid into the Southern Ocean – Documentation and environmental consequences". Geophysical Research Abstracts 7. 1607-7962/gra/EGU05-A-02449. http://www.cosis.net/abstracts/EGU05/02449/EGU05-J-02449.pdf. Retrieved 2008-06-22.