Wharton Basin

Wharton Basin is the marine area of the north east quarter of the Indian Ocean. It is named after William Wharton (1843-1905), Hydrographer of the Navy. Alternative names are Cocos Basin (after the Cocos Islands) and West Australian Basin.[1]

Wharton Basin

It lies east of the Ninety East Ridge and west of Western Australia.

It is of interest in relation to Indian Ocean floor movement and adjacent fracture zones [2] and the relationship between the Indian and Australian plates [3] and is one of a number of features of the Indian Ocean that has been studied extensively.[4] However, its floor has not been charted since the 1960s and is not well known.[5]

References

  1. Sclater, John G.; Fisher, Robert L. (1974). "Evolution of the East: Central Indian Ocean, with Emphasis on the Tectonic Setting of the Ninetyeast Ridge". Geological Society of America Bulletin. 85 (5): 683–702. doi:10.1130/0016-7606(1974)85<683:eoteci>2.0.co;2.
  2. Larson, Roger L.; Carpenter, George B.; Diebold, John B. (1978). "A geophysical study of the Wharton Basin near the Investigator Fracture Zone". Journal of Geophysical Research. 83 (B2): 773. Bibcode:1978JGR....83..773L. doi:10.1029/jb083ib02p00773.
  3. Robinson, D. P.; C. Henry; S. Das; J. H. Woodhouse (11 May 2002). "The discovery of a conjugate system of faults in the Wharton Basin intraplate deformation zone". Science. 292 (5519): 1145–1148. doi:10.1126/science.1059395. PMID 11349145.
  4. Schlich, R., (1982). The Indian Ocean: Aseismic ridges, spreading centers and oceanic basins. In A.E.M. Nairn and F.G. Stehli , (Eds.), The Ocean Basins and Margins, vol. 6, The Indian Ocean, Plenum, New-York.
  5. Pearlman, Jonathan (9 April 2014). "MH370 'may be found in days' as ship picks up signals again". Telegraph.


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