ecomii - a better way
March 20, 2010  |  Login
Oceanic islands

Islands rising from the deep sea floor. Oceanic islands range in size from mere specks of rock or sand above the reach of tides to large masses such as Iceland (39,800 mi2 or 103,000 km2). Excluded are islands that have continental crust, such as the Seychelles, Norfolk, or Sardinia, even though surrounded by ocean; all oceanic islands surmount volcanic foundations. A few of these have active volcanoes, such as on Hawaii, the Galápagos islands, Iceland, and the Azores, but most islands are on extinct volcanoes. On some islands, the volcanic foundations have subsided beneath sea level, while coral reefs growing very close to sea level have kept pace with the subsidence, accumulating thicknesses of as much as 5000 ft (1500 m) of limestone deposits between the underlying volcanic rocks and the present-day coral islands. Reef Volcano

Oceanic islands owe their existence to volcanism that began on the deep sea floor and built the volcanic edifices, flow on flow, up to sea level and above. The highest of the oceanic islands is Hawaii, where the peak of Mauna Kea volcano reaches 14,000 ft (4200 m). Most volcanic islands are probably built from scratch in less than 106 years, but minor recurrent volcanism may continue for millions of years after the main construction stage. Volcanology

Islands in regions of high oceanic fertility are commonly host to colonies of sea birds, and the deposits of guano have been an important source of phosphate for fertilizer. On some islands, for example, Nauru in the western equatorial Pacific, the original guano has been dissolved and phosphate minerals reprecipitated in porous host limestone rocks. The principal crop on most tropical oceanic islands is coconuts, exploited for their oil content, but some larger volcanic islands, with rich soils and abundant water supplies, are sites of plantations of sugarcane and pineapple. Atoll and barrier-reef islands have very limited water supplies, depending on small lenses of ground water, augmented by collection of rainwater. Atoll Island biogeography Reef

 Back to all terms
From McGraw-Hill Concise Encyclopedia of Environmental Science. The Content is a copyrighted work of McGraw-Hill and McGraw-Hill reserves all rights in and to the Content. The Work is © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
 

Recent Message Board Posts

 
 
ecomii featured poll

Are vitamins and supplements effective?

 

 

Are vitamins and supplements effective?
 
 
ecomii resources
 
ecomii Tips Newsletter 

Sign up today to receive a weekly tip for living greener

 
Get in Touch

Got suggestions? Want to write for us? See something we could improve? Let us know!