Kings Trough
King's Trough is an undersea trough in the Atlantic ocean. It is located on the east side of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, northwest of the Açores-Biscay rise and roughly 400 km NNE of the Azores. It is about 400 km long, running in a NW–SE direction. To the east it branches into the Peake Deep and Freen Deep. The center depth is 4500 m. Surrounding the trough are high ridges and seamounts, such as the Antialtair seamount and the Crum seamount complex.[1] Various explanations for the complex have been suggested, ranging from compression[2]a former plate-boundary,[3] transform faulting or even an oblique meteor impact.[4]
The trough, being in an apparently geologically stable region, has been studied as a possible location for radioactive waste disposal.[5]
References
43°48′00.0″N 22°00′00.9″W / 43.800000°N 22.000250°W
- ^ Laughton, A.S., Roberts, D.G. and Graves, R. (1975) – Bathymetry of the Northeast Atlantic: Mid-Atlantic Ridge to Southwest Europe. Deep-Sea Research 22:792–810.
- ^ Kenneth O. Emery; Elazar Uchupi (6 December 2012). The Geology of the Atlantic Ocean. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 360–. ISBN 978-1-4612-5278-8.
- ^ Wes Gibbons; Teresa Moreno (Ph. D.); Geological Society of London (2002). The Geology of Spain. Geological Society of London. pp. 368–. ISBN 978-1-86239-127-7.
- ^ Lars G. Franzén, Gustaf D. Nelhans, A geomorphologic approach to the interpretation of the King’s Trough Complex, North-East Atlantic. 3rd Symposium on the Iberian Atlantic Margin, Faro, Portugal. 2000 http://www.gvc.gu.se/digitalAssets/1308/1308561_franzen-and-nelhans-2010.pdf
- ^ Kidd, R.B., Searle, R.C., Weaver, P.P.E., Jacobs, C.L., Huggett, Q.J., Noel, M.J. and Schultheiss, P.J. (1983) King's Trough Flank: geological and geophysical investigations of its suitability for high-level radioactive waste disposal. Wormley, UK, Institute of Oceanographic Sciences, 99pp. (Institute of Oceanographic Sciences Report,(166)) http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/14583/