315 relations: Absolute monarchy, Abyssal plain, Aethiopia, Aethiopian Sea, Africa, African Plate, Age of Discovery, Agulhas Bank, Agulhas Current, Albatross, Alexandre Exquemelin, American Civil War, American eel, American plaice, Americas, Ancient Greece, Antarctic bottom water, Antarctic ice sheet, Antarctic Intermediate Water, Antarctica, Aquatic sill, Arctic Ocean, Arctogadus glacialis, Atlantic cod, Atlantic halibut, Atlantic multidecadal oscillation, Atlantic slave trade, Atlantis, Atlas, Atlas (mythology), Atlas Mountains, Auk, Autosome, Azores Triple Junction, Azores–Gibraltar Transform Fault, Þingvellir, Bahama Banks, Baltic Sea, Barbary pirates, Barents Sea, Bathymetry, Bay of Fundy, Behavioral modernity, Benguela Current, Benue Trough, Beringia, Black Sea, Blake Plateau, Blombos Cave, Blue whiting, ..., Bouvet Island, Cape Agulhas, Cape Bojador, Cape Cod, Cape Floristic Region, Cape Fold Belt, Cape Hatteras, Cape of Good Hope, Capelin, Carbonate platform, Caribbean Plate, Caribbean Sea, Carpathian Mountains, Central America, Central American Seaway, Central Atlantic magmatic province, Challenger expedition, Charlie-Gibbs Fracture Zone, Chlorofluorocarbon, Christopher Columbus, Clovis culture, Collapse of the Atlantic northwest cod fishery, Columbia University, Continental shelf, Convergent boundary, Coriolis force, Cunene horse mackerel, Davis Strait, Dead zone (ecology), Denmark Strait, Dike (geology), Dike swarm, Divergent boundary, Dogger Bank, Doggerland, Drake Passage, Drift netting, Earth, Earth's magnetic field, Eastern oyster, Eddy (fluid dynamics), Ekman layer, Enkapune Ya Muto, Eocene–Oligocene extinction event, Equatorial Counter Current, Equilibrium level, Ertebølle culture, Eurasia, Eurasian Basin, Eurasian Plate, European colonization of the Americas, European eel, Extinction event, Eyjafjallajökull, Farfantepenaeus aztecus, Faroe Islands, Fernando de Noronha, Fertilizer, Fifteen-Twenty Fracture Zone, Georges Bank, German Meteor expedition, Gibraltar Arc, Global warming, Gough and Inaccessible Islands, Grand Banks of Newfoundland, Gravel, Great American Interchange, Greek mythology, Greenland, Greenland halibut, Greenland Sea, Grenadiers (fish), Grouper, Gulf menhaden, Gulf of Mexico, Gulf Stream, Guyot, Haddock, Hake, Haliotis midae, Henry Mainwaring, Herodotus, Histories (Herodotus), Homo sapiens, Horse mackerel, Human evolution, Human Y-chromosome DNA haplogroup, Hypoxia (environmental), Iapetus Ocean, Iberian Peninsula, Iceberg, Iceland, Iceland hotspot, Iliad, Illex argentinus, Incineration, Indian Ocean, Indigenous peoples of the Americas, Industrial Revolution, International Hydrographic Organization, International waters, Intertropical Convergence Zone, Inuit, Irish Sea, John Cabot, Laacher See, Labrador Sea, Labrador Sea Water, Lake Maracaibo, Lamont–Doherty Earth Observatory, Landnámabók, Landscape of the Pico Island Vineyard Culture, Large igneous province, Last Glacial Maximum, Laurentian fan, Laurentide Ice Sheet, List of countries and territories bordering the Atlantic Ocean, List of epidemics, List of islands in the Atlantic Ocean, List of ports and harbours of the Atlantic Ocean, List of seas, Little Ice Age, Lobster, Lutjanidae, Mackerel, Mafic, Magdalenian, Magmatism, Manatee, Manganese nodule, Marine debris, Marine isotope stage, Marine mammal, Marine pollution, Mediterranean Sea, Merluccius capensis, Merluccius paradoxus, Mid-Atlantic Ridge, Mid-ocean ridge, Midden, Milwaukee Deep, Mitochondrial DNA, Mixed layer, Nephrops norvegicus, New World, Newfoundland (island), Norse colonization of North America, North American Plate, North Atlantic Current, North Atlantic Deep Water, North Atlantic Gyre, North Atlantic oscillation, North Equatorial Current, North Pole, North Sea, Norwegian Sea, Nuclear weapons testing, Ocean, Ocean gyre, Oceanic basin, Oceanic plateau, Oceanic trench, Oceanus, Odyssey, Oil spill, Old World, Overfishing, Pacific Ocean, Pandalus borealis, Pangaea, Pannonian Basin, Panthalassa, Paraná and Etendeka traps, Passive margin, Paul S. Martin, Pedro Álvares Cabral, Pelagic fish, Petrel, Pillars of Hercules, Pillow lava, Pinniped, Piracy in the Atlantic World, Placer deposit, Plate tectonics, Pollachius virens, Porcupine Bank, Pre-Columbian trans-oceanic contact theories, Precipitation, Puerto Rico Trench, Recent African origin of modern humans, Redfish, Rift valley, Rio Grande Rise, Rocas Atoll, Romanche Trench, Round sardinella, Salinity, Sand, Sand eel, Sardinella brasiliensis, Sardinops, Sargassum, Sargassum fish, Scotia Arc, Scotia Sea, Scotian Shelf, Sea ice, Seafloor spreading, Seamount, Sebastes, Sedimentary rock, Settlement of the Americas, Seven Seas, Shutdown of thermohaline circulation, Sicily, Slavery in Brazil, Slavery in Britain, Slavery in the United States, Solutrean hypothesis, South American Plate, South Atlantic Gyre, South Sandwich Trench, Southern African anchovy, Southern Ocean, Spiny dogfish, Stesichorus, Strait of Gibraltar, Submarine canyon, Subtropics, Sverdrup, Tethys Ocean, The World Factbook, Thermocline, Thermohaline circulation, Tide, Titan (mythology), Transatlantic crossing, Triassic–Jurassic extinction event, Tristan hotspot, Tropical cyclone, United States Hydrographic Office, Vasco da Gama, Vegetative reproduction, Voyages of Christopher Columbus, Walvis Ridge, Water mass, Wild fisheries, Wilson cycle, Wind shear, Witch (righteye flounder), World Digital Library, World Heritage site, World Ocean, Yellowtail flounder, 15th parallel north, 16th parallel north, 20th meridian east, 25th parallel north, 25th parallel south, 40th parallel north, 42nd parallel south, 53rd parallel north, 60th parallel north, 60th parallel south, 8th parallel north. Expand index (265 more) »
Absolute monarchy
Absolute monarchy, is a form of monarchy in which one ruler has supreme authority and where that authority is not restricted by any written laws, legislature, or customs.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Absolute monarchy · See more »
Abyssal plain
An abyssal plain is an underwater plain on the deep ocean floor, usually found at depths between and.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Abyssal plain · See more »
Aethiopia
Ancient Aethiopia (Αἰθιοπία Aithiopia) first appears as a geographical term in classical documents in reference to the upper Nile region, as well as all certain areas south of the Sahara desert and south of the Atlantic Ocean.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Aethiopia · See more »
Aethiopian Sea
Aethiopian Sea, Æthiopian Ocean or Æthiopic Ocean (Æthiopicum Mare or Oceanus Æthiopicus; البحر الأثيوبي) was the name given to the southern part of the Atlantic Ocean in classical geographical works.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Aethiopian Sea · See more »
Africa
Africa is the world's second largest and second most-populous continent (behind Asia in both categories).
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Africa · See more »
African Plate
The African Plate is a major tectonic plate straddling the equator as well as the prime meridian.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and African Plate · See more »
Age of Discovery
The Age of Discovery, or the Age of Exploration (approximately from the beginning of the 15th century until the end of the 18th century) is an informal and loosely defined term for the period in European history in which extensive overseas exploration emerged as a powerful factor in European culture and was the beginning of globalization.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Age of Discovery · See more »
Agulhas Bank
The Agulhas Bank (from Portuguese for Cape Agulhas, Cabo das Agulhas, "Cape of Needles") is a broad, shallow part of the southern African continental shelf which extends up to south of Cape Agulhas before falling steeply to the abyssal plain.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Agulhas Bank · See more »
Agulhas Current
The Agulhas Current is the western boundary current of the southwest Indian Ocean.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Agulhas Current · See more »
Albatross
Albatrosses, of the biological family Diomedeidae, are large seabirds related to the procellariids, storm petrels and diving petrels in the order Procellariiformes (the tubenoses).
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Albatross · See more »
Alexandre Exquemelin
Alexandre Olivier Exquemelin (also spelled Esquemeling, Exquemeling, or Oexmelin) (c. 1645–1707) was a French, Dutch or Flemish writer best known as the author of one of the most important sourcebooks of 17th-century piracy, first published in Dutch as De Americaensche Zee-Roovers, in Amsterdam, by Jan ten Hoorn, in 1678.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Alexandre Exquemelin · See more »
American Civil War
The American Civil War (also known by other names) was a war fought in the United States from 1861 to 1865.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and American Civil War · See more »
American eel
The American eel (Anguilla rostrata) is a facultative catadromous fish found on the eastern coast of North America.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and American eel · See more »
American plaice
The American plaice, American sole or long rough dab (Hippoglossoides platessoides) is a North Atlantic flatfish that belongs, along with other right-eyed flounders, to the Pleuronectidae family.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and American plaice · See more »
Americas
The Americas (also collectively called America)"America." The Oxford Companion to the English Language.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Americas · See more »
Ancient Greece
Ancient Greece was a civilization belonging to a period of Greek history from the Greek Dark Ages of the 13th–9th centuries BC to the end of antiquity (AD 600).
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Ancient Greece · See more »
Antarctic bottom water
The Antarctic bottom water (AABW) is a type of water mass in the Southern Ocean surrounding Antarctica with temperatures ranging from −0.8 to 2 °C (35 °F), salinities from 34.6 to 34.7 psu.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Antarctic bottom water · See more »
Antarctic ice sheet
The Antarctic ice sheet is one of the two polar ice caps of the Earth.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Antarctic ice sheet · See more »
Antarctic Intermediate Water
Antarctic Intermediate Water (AAIW) is a cold, relatively low salinity water mass found mostly at intermediate depths in the Southern Ocean.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Antarctic Intermediate Water · See more »
Antarctica
Antarctica is Earth's southernmost continent.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Antarctica · See more »
Aquatic sill
An aquatic sill (or an oceanic sill) is a sea floor (or lake floor) barrier of relatively shallow depth restricting water movement between oceanic basins.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Aquatic sill · See more »
Arctic Ocean
The Arctic Ocean is the smallest and shallowest of the world's five major oceans.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Arctic Ocean · See more »
Arctogadus glacialis
Arctogadus glacialis, known also with ambiguous common names Arctic cod and polar cod, is an Arctic species of fish in the cod family Gadidae, related to the true cod (genus Gadus).
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Arctogadus glacialis · See more »
Atlantic cod
The Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) is a benthopelagic fish of the family Gadidae, widely consumed by humans.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Atlantic cod · See more »
Atlantic halibut
The Atlantic halibut (Hippoglossus hippoglossus) is a flatfish of the family Pleuronectidae.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Atlantic halibut · See more »
Atlantic multidecadal oscillation
The Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO) is a climate cycle that affects the sea surface temperature (SST) of the North Atlantic Ocean based on different modes on multidecadal timescales.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Atlantic multidecadal oscillation · See more »
Atlantic slave trade
The Atlantic slave trade or transatlantic slave trade involved the transportation by slave traders of enslaved African people, mainly to the Americas.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Atlantic slave trade · See more »
Atlantis
Atlantis (Ἀτλαντὶς νῆσος, "island of Atlas") is a fictional island mentioned within an allegory on the hubris of nations in Plato's works Timaeus and Critias, where it represents the antagonist naval power that besieges "Ancient Athens", the pseudo-historic embodiment of Plato's ideal state in The Republic.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Atlantis · See more »
Atlas
An atlas is a collection of maps; it is typically a bundle of maps of Earth or a region of Earth.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Atlas · See more »
Atlas (mythology)
In Greek mythology, Atlas (Ἄτλας, Átlas) was a Titan condemned to hold up the sky for eternity after the Titanomachy.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Atlas (mythology) · See more »
Atlas Mountains
The Atlas Mountains (jibāl al-ʾaṭlas; ⵉⴷⵓⵔⴰⵔ ⵏ ⵡⴰⵟⵍⴰⵙ, idurar n waṭlas) are a mountain range in the Maghreb.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Atlas Mountains · See more »
Auk
An auk or alcid is a bird of the family Alcidae in the order Charadriiformes.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Auk · See more »
Autosome
An autosome is a chromosome that is not an allosome (a sex chromosome).
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Autosome · See more »
Azores Triple Junction
The Azores Triple Junction (ATJ) is a geologic triple junction where the boundaries of three tectonic plates intersect: the North American Plate, the Eurasian Plate and the African Plate.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Azores Triple Junction · See more »
Azores–Gibraltar Transform Fault
The Azores–Gibraltar Transform Fault (AGFZ), also called a fault zone and a fracture zone, is a major seismic fault in the Central Atlantic Ocean west of the Strait of Gibraltar.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Azores–Gibraltar Transform Fault · See more »
Þingvellir
Þingvellir, anglicised as Thingvellir,The spelling Pingvellir is incorrect, as the letter “p” should never be used to represent the letter “þ” (thorn), which is pronounced as "th".
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Þingvellir · See more »
Bahama Banks
The Bahama Banks are the submerged carbonate platforms that make up much of the Bahama Archipelago.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Bahama Banks · See more »
Baltic Sea
The Baltic Sea is a sea of the Atlantic Ocean, enclosed by Scandinavia, Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Russia, Poland, Germany and the North and Central European Plain.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Baltic Sea · See more »
Barbary pirates
The Barbary pirates, sometimes called Barbary corsairs or Ottoman corsairs, were Ottoman pirates and privateers who operated from North Africa, based primarily in the ports of Salé, Rabat, Algiers, Tunis, and Tripoli.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Barbary pirates · See more »
Barents Sea
The Barents Sea (Barentshavet; Баренцево море, Barentsevo More) is a marginal sea of the Arctic Ocean, located off the northern coasts of Norway and Russia divided between Norwegian and Russian territorial waters.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Barents Sea · See more »
Bathymetry
Bathymetry is the study of underwater depth of lake or ocean floors.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Bathymetry · See more »
Bay of Fundy
The Bay of Fundy (or Fundy Bay; Baie de Fundy) is a bay between the Canadian provinces of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, with a small portion touching the US state of Maine.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Bay of Fundy · See more »
Behavioral modernity
Behavioral modernity is a suite of behavioral and cognitive traits that distinguishes current Homo sapiens from other anatomically modern humans, hominins, and primates.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Behavioral modernity · See more »
Benguela Current
The Benguela Current is the broad, northward flowing ocean current that forms the eastern portion of the South Atlantic Ocean gyre.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Benguela Current · See more »
Benue Trough
The Benue Trough is a major geological structure underlying a large part of Nigeria and extending about 1,000 km northeast from the Bight of Benin to Lake Chad.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Benue Trough · See more »
Beringia
Beringia is defined today as the land and maritime area bounded on the west by the Lena River in Russia; on the east by the Mackenzie River in Canada; on the north by 72 degrees north latitude in the Chukchi Sea; and on the south by the tip of the Kamchatka Peninsula.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Beringia · See more »
Black Sea
The Black Sea is a body of water and marginal sea of the Atlantic Ocean between Eastern Europe, the Caucasus, and Western Asia.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Black Sea · See more »
Blake Plateau
The Blake Plateau lies in the western Atlantic Ocean off the southeastern United States coasts of North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia and Florida.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Blake Plateau · See more »
Blombos Cave
Blombos Cave is an archaeological site located in Blombosfontein Nature Reserve, about 300 km east of Cape Town on the Southern Cape coastline, South Africa.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Blombos Cave · See more »
Blue whiting
The blue whiting, Micromesistius poutassou, one of the two species in the genus Micromesistius in the cod family, is common in the northeast Atlantic Ocean from Morocco to Iceland and Spitsbergen.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Blue whiting · See more »
Bouvet Island
Bouvet Island is an uninhabited subantarctic high island and dependency of Norway located in the South Atlantic Ocean at, thus putting it north of and outside the Antarctic Treaty System.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Bouvet Island · See more »
Cape Agulhas
Cape Agulhas (Cabo das Agulhas, "Cape of the Needles") is a rocky headland in Western Cape, South Africa.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Cape Agulhas · See more »
Cape Bojador
Cape Bojador (رأس بوجادور, trans. Rā's Būjādūr; ⴱⵓⵊⴷⵓⵔ, Bujdur; Spanish and Cabo Bojador; Cap Boujdour) is a headland on the northern coast of Western Sahara, at 26° 07' 37"N, 14° 29' 57"W (various sources give various locations: this is from the Sailing Directions for the region), as well as the name of the large nearby town with a population of 41,178.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Cape Bojador · See more »
Cape Cod
Cape Cod is a geographic cape extending into the Atlantic Ocean from the southeastern corner of mainland Massachusetts, in the northeastern United States.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Cape Cod · See more »
Cape Floristic Region
The Cape Floristic Region is a floristic region located near the southern tip of South Africa.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Cape Floristic Region · See more »
Cape Fold Belt
The Cape Fold Belt is a fold and thrust belt of late Paleozoic age, which affected the sequence of sedimentary rock layers of the Cape Supergroup in the southwestern corner of South Africa.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Cape Fold Belt · See more »
Cape Hatteras
Cape Hatteras is a thin, broken strand of islands in North Carolina that arch out into the Atlantic Ocean away from the US mainland, then back toward the mainland, creating a series of sheltered islands between the Outer Banks and the mainland.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Cape Hatteras · See more »
Cape of Good Hope
The Cape of Good Hope (Kaap die Goeie Hoop, Kaap de Goede Hoop, Cabo da Boa Esperança) is a rocky headland on the Atlantic coast of the Cape Peninsula, South Africa.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Cape of Good Hope · See more »
Capelin
The capelin or caplin (Mallotus villosus) is a small forage fish of the smelt family found in the North Atlantic, North Pacific, and Arctic Oceans.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Capelin · See more »
Carbonate platform
A carbonate platform is a sedimentary body which possesses topographic relief, and is composed of autochthonous calcareous deposits (Wilson, 1975).
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Carbonate platform · See more »
Caribbean Plate
The Caribbean Plate is a mostly oceanic tectonic plate underlying Central America and the Caribbean Sea off the north coast of South America.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Caribbean Plate · See more »
Caribbean Sea
The Caribbean Sea (Mar Caribe; Mer des Caraïbes; Caraïbische Zee) is a sea of the Atlantic Ocean in the tropics of the Western Hemisphere.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Caribbean Sea · See more »
Carpathian Mountains
The Carpathian Mountains or Carpathians are a mountain range system forming an arc roughly long across Central and Eastern Europe, making them the second-longest mountain range in Europe (after the Scandinavian Mountains). They provide the habitat for the largest European populations of brown bears, wolves, chamois, and lynxes, with the highest concentration in Romania, as well as over one third of all European plant species.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Carpathian Mountains · See more »
Central America
Central America (América Central, Centroamérica) is the southernmost, isthmian portion of the North American continent, which connects with the South American continent on the southeast.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Central America · See more »
Central American Seaway
The Central American Seaway, also known as the Panamanic Inter-American and Proto-Caribbean Seaway, was a body of water that once separated North America from South America.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Central American Seaway · See more »
Central Atlantic magmatic province
The Central Atlantic magmatic province (CAMP) is the Earth's largest continental large igneous province, covering an area of roughly 11 million km2.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Central Atlantic magmatic province · See more »
Challenger expedition
The Challenger expedition of 1872–76 was a scientific exercise that made many discoveries to lay the foundation of oceanography.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Challenger expedition · See more »
Charlie-Gibbs Fracture Zone
Charlie-Gibbs Fracture Zone is a system of two parallel fracture zones.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Charlie-Gibbs Fracture Zone · See more »
Chlorofluorocarbon
Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) are fully halogenated paraffin hydrocarbons that contain only carbon (С), chlorine (Cl), and fluorine (F), produced as volatile derivative of methane, ethane, and propane.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Chlorofluorocarbon · See more »
Christopher Columbus
Christopher Columbus (before 31 October 145120 May 1506) was an Italian explorer, navigator, and colonizer.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Christopher Columbus · See more »
Clovis culture
The Clovis culture is a prehistoric Paleo-Indian culture, named for distinct stone tools found in close association with Pleistocene fauna at Blackwater Locality No. 1 near Clovis, New Mexico, in the 1920s and 1930s.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Clovis culture · See more »
Collapse of the Atlantic northwest cod fishery
In 1992 the Canadian Federal Minister of Fisheries and Oceans, John Crosbie, declared a moratorium on the Northern Cod fishery, which for the preceding 500 years had largely shaped the lives and communities of Canada's eastern coast.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Collapse of the Atlantic northwest cod fishery · See more »
Columbia University
Columbia University (Columbia; officially Columbia University in the City of New York), established in 1754, is a private Ivy League research university in Upper Manhattan, New York City.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Columbia University · See more »
Continental shelf
The continental shelf is an underwater landmass which extends from a continent, resulting in an area of relatively shallow water known as a shelf sea.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Continental shelf · See more »
Convergent boundary
In plate tectonics, a convergent boundary, also known as a destructive plate boundary, is a region of active deformation where two or more tectonic plates or fragments of the lithosphere are near the end of their life cycle.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Convergent boundary · See more »
Coriolis force
In physics, the Coriolis force is an inertial force that acts on objects that are in motion relative to a rotating reference frame.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Coriolis force · See more »
Cunene horse mackerel
The Cunene horse mackerel (Trachurus trecae) is a species named after mackerel in the family Carangidae.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Cunene horse mackerel · See more »
Davis Strait
Davis Strait (Détroit de Davis) is a northern arm of the Labrador Sea.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Davis Strait · See more »
Dead zone (ecology)
Dead zones are hypoxic (low-oxygen) areas in the world's oceans and large lakes, caused by "excessive nutrient pollution from human activities coupled with other factors that deplete the oxygen required to support most marine life in bottom and near-bottom water.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Dead zone (ecology) · See more »
Denmark Strait
The Denmark Strait or Greenland Strait ('Greenland Sound') is an oceanic strait between Greenland (to its northwest) and Iceland (to its southeast).
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Denmark Strait · See more »
Dike (geology)
A dike or dyke, in geological usage, is a sheet of rock that is formed in a fracture in a pre-existing rock body.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Dike (geology) · See more »
Dike swarm
A dike swarm or dyke swarm is a large geological structure consisting of a major group of parallel, linear, or radially oriented dikes intruded within continental crust.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Dike swarm · See more »
Divergent boundary
In plate tectonics, a divergent boundary or divergent plate boundary (also known as a constructive boundary or an extensional boundary) is a linear feature that exists between two tectonic plates that are moving away from each other.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Divergent boundary · See more »
Dogger Bank
Dogger Bank (Dutch: Doggersbank, German: Doggerbank, Danish: Doggerbanke) is a large sandbank in a shallow area of the North Sea about off the east coast of England.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Dogger Bank · See more »
Doggerland
Doggerland is the name of a land mass now beneath the southern North Sea that connected Great Britain to continental Europe.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Doggerland · See more »
Drake Passage
The Drake Passage or Mar de Hoces—Sea of Hoces—is the body of water between South America's Cape Horn and the South Shetland Islands of Antarctica.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Drake Passage · See more »
Drift netting
Drift netting is a fishing technique where nets, called drift nets, hang vertically in the water column without being anchored to the bottom.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Drift netting · See more »
Earth
Earth is the third planet from the Sun and the only astronomical object known to harbor life.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Earth · See more »
Earth's magnetic field
Earth's magnetic field, also known as the geomagnetic field, is the magnetic field that extends from the Earth's interior out into space, where it meets the solar wind, a stream of charged particles emanating from the Sun.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Earth's magnetic field · See more »
Eastern oyster
The eastern oyster (Crassostrea virginica)—also called Wellfleet oyster, Atlantic oyster, Virginia oyster, or American oyster—is a species of true oyster native to the eastern seaboard and Gulf of Mexico coast of North America.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Eastern oyster · See more »
Eddy (fluid dynamics)
In fluid dynamics, an eddy is the swirling of a fluid and the reverse current created when the fluid is in a turbulent flow regime.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Eddy (fluid dynamics) · See more »
Ekman layer
The Ekman layer is the layer in a fluid where there is a force balance between pressure gradient force, Coriolis force and turbulent drag.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Ekman layer · See more »
Enkapune Ya Muto
Enkapune Ya Muto, also known as Twilight Cave, is a Late Stone Age site on the Mau Escarpment of Kenya.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Enkapune Ya Muto · See more »
Eocene–Oligocene extinction event
The transition between the end of the Eocene and the beginning of the Oligocene is marked by large-scale extinction and floral and faunal turnover (although minor in comparison to the largest mass extinctions).
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Eocene–Oligocene extinction event · See more »
Equatorial Counter Current
The Equatorial Counter Current is an eastward moving, wind-driven current flowing 10-15m deep found in the Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific Oceans.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Equatorial Counter Current · See more »
Equilibrium level
In meteorology, the equilibrium level (EL), or level of neutral buoyancy (LNB), or limit of convection (LOC), is the height at which a rising parcel of air is at the same temperature as its environment.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Equilibrium level · See more »
Ertebølle culture
The Ertebølle culture (ca 5300 BC – 3950 BC) is the name of a hunter-gatherer and fisher, pottery-making culture dating to the end of the Mesolithic period.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Ertebølle culture · See more »
Eurasia
Eurasia is a combined continental landmass of Europe and Asia.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Eurasia · See more »
Eurasian Basin
The Eurasian Basin, is one of the two major basins into which the North Polar Basin of the Arctic Ocean is split by the Lomonosov Ridge, the other big basin is the Amerasian Basin.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Eurasian Basin · See more »
Eurasian Plate
The Eurasian Plate is a tectonic plate which includes most of the continent of Eurasia (a landmass consisting of the traditional continents of Europe and Asia), with the notable exceptions of the Indian subcontinent, the Arabian subcontinent, and the area east of the Chersky Range in East Siberia.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Eurasian Plate · See more »
European colonization of the Americas
The European colonization of the Americas describes the history of the settlement and establishment of control of the continents of the Americas by most of the naval powers of Europe.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and European colonization of the Americas · See more »
European eel
The European eel (Anguilla anguilla) is a species of eel, a snake-like, catadromous fish.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and European eel · See more »
Extinction event
An extinction event (also known as a mass extinction or biotic crisis) is a widespread and rapid decrease in the biodiversity on Earth.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Extinction event · See more »
Eyjafjallajökull
Eyjafjallajökull (English Island Mountain Glacier, is one of the smaller ice caps of Iceland, north of Skógar and west of Mýrdalsjökull. The ice cap covers the caldera of a volcano with a summit elevation of. The volcano has erupted relatively frequently since the last glacial period, most recently in 2010.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Eyjafjallajökull · See more »
Farfantepenaeus aztecus
Farfantepenaeus aztecus is a species of marine penaeid shrimps found around the east coast of the USA and Mexico.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Farfantepenaeus aztecus · See more »
Faroe Islands
The Faroe Islands (Føroyar; Færøerne), sometimes called the Faeroe Islands, is an archipelago between the Norwegian Sea and the North Atlantic, about halfway between Norway and Iceland, north-northwest of Scotland.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Faroe Islands · See more »
Fernando de Noronha
Fernando de Noronha is an archipelago of 21 islands and islets in the Atlantic Ocean, offshore from the Brazilian coast.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Fernando de Noronha · See more »
Fertilizer
A fertilizer (American English) or fertiliser (British English; see spelling differences) is any material of natural or synthetic origin (other than liming materials) that is applied to soils or to plant tissues to supply one or more plant nutrients essential to the growth of plants.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Fertilizer · See more »
Fifteen-Twenty Fracture Zone
The Fifteen-Twenty or 15°20' Fracture Zone (FTFZ), also known as the Cabo Verde Fracture Zone, is a fracture zone located on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR) in the central Atlantic Ocean between 14–16°N.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Fifteen-Twenty Fracture Zone · See more »
Georges Bank
Georges Bank (formerly known as St. Georges Bank) is a large elevated area of the sea floor between Cape Cod, Massachusetts (United States), and Cape Sable Island, Nova Scotia (Canada).
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Georges Bank · See more »
German Meteor expedition
The German Meteor expedition (German: Deutsche Atlantik Expedition) was an oceanographic expedition that explored the South Atlantic ocean from the equatorial region to Antarctica in 1925–1927.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and German Meteor expedition · See more »
Gibraltar Arc
The Gibraltar Arc is a geological region corresponding to an arcuate orogen surrounding the Alboran Sea, between the Iberian Peninsula and Africa.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Gibraltar Arc · See more »
Global warming
Global warming, also referred to as climate change, is the observed century-scale rise in the average temperature of the Earth's climate system and its related effects.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Global warming · See more »
Gough and Inaccessible Islands
Gough and Inaccessible Islands is a UNESCO World Heritage Site in the archipelago of Tristan da Cunha in the South Atlantic Ocean.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Gough and Inaccessible Islands · See more »
Grand Banks of Newfoundland
The Grand Banks of Newfoundland are a group of underwater plateaus south-east of Newfoundland on the North American continental shelf.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Grand Banks of Newfoundland · See more »
Gravel
Gravel is a loose aggregation of rock fragments.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Gravel · See more »
Great American Interchange
The Great American Interchange was an important late Cenozoic paleozoogeographic event in which land and freshwater fauna migrated from North America via Central America to South America and vice versa, as the volcanic Isthmus of Panama rose up from the sea floor and bridged the formerly separated continents.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Great American Interchange · See more »
Greek mythology
Greek mythology is the body of myths and teachings that belong to the ancient Greeks, concerning their gods and heroes, the nature of the world, and the origins and significance of their own cult and ritual practices.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Greek mythology · See more »
Greenland
Greenland (Kalaallit Nunaat,; Grønland) is an autonomous constituent country within the Kingdom of Denmark between the Arctic and Atlantic Oceans, east of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Greenland · See more »
Greenland halibut
The Greenland halibut or Greenland turbot (Reinhardtius hippoglossoides) belongs to the Pleuronectidae family (the right eye flounders), and is the only species of the genus Reinhardtius.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Greenland halibut · See more »
Greenland Sea
The Greenland Sea is a body of water that borders Greenland to the west, the Svalbard archipelago to the east, Fram Strait and the Arctic Ocean to the north, and the Norwegian Sea and Iceland to the south.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Greenland Sea · See more »
Grenadiers (fish)
Grenadiers or rattails are generally large, brown to black gadiform marine fish of the subfamily Macrourinae, the largest subfamily of the family Macrouridae.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Grenadiers (fish) · See more »
Grouper
Groupers are fish of any of a number of genera in the subfamily Epinephelinae of the family Serranidae, in the order Perciformes.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Grouper · See more »
Gulf menhaden
The Gulf menhaden (Brevoortia patronus) is a small marine filter-feeding fish belonging to the family Clupeidae.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Gulf menhaden · See more »
Gulf of Mexico
The Gulf of Mexico (Golfo de México) is an ocean basin and a marginal sea of the Atlantic Ocean, largely surrounded by the North American continent.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Gulf of Mexico · See more »
Gulf Stream
The Gulf Stream, together with its northern extension the North Atlantic Drift, is a warm and swift Atlantic ocean current that originates in the Gulf of Mexico and stretches to the tip of Florida, and follows the eastern coastlines of the United States and Newfoundland before crossing the Atlantic Ocean.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Gulf Stream · See more »
Guyot
A guyot (pronounced), also known as a tablemount, is an isolated underwater volcanic mountain (seamount), with a flat top over below the surface of the sea.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Guyot · See more »
Haddock
The haddock (Melanogrammus aeglefinus) is a saltwater fish from the family Gadidae, the true cods, it is the only species in the monotypic genus Melanogrammus.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Haddock · See more »
Hake
The term hake refers to fish in either of.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Hake · See more »
Haliotis midae
Haliotis midae, known commonly as the South African abalone or the perlemoen abalone, is a species of large sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Haliotidae, the abalones.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Haliotis midae · See more »
Henry Mainwaring
Sir Henry Mainwaring (1587–1653), was an English lawyer, soldier, author, seaman and politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1621 to 1622.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Henry Mainwaring · See more »
Herodotus
Herodotus (Ἡρόδοτος, Hêródotos) was a Greek historian who was born in Halicarnassus in the Persian Empire (modern-day Bodrum, Turkey) and lived in the fifth century BC (484– 425 BC), a contemporary of Thucydides, Socrates, and Euripides.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Herodotus · See more »
Histories (Herodotus)
The Histories (Ἱστορίαι;; also known as The History) of Herodotus is considered the founding work of history in Western literature.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Histories (Herodotus) · See more »
Homo sapiens
Homo sapiens is the systematic name used in taxonomy (also known as binomial nomenclature) for the only extant human species.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Homo sapiens · See more »
Horse mackerel
Horse mackerel is a vague vernacular term for a range of species of fish throughout the English-speaking world.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Horse mackerel · See more »
Human evolution
Human evolution is the evolutionary process that led to the emergence of anatomically modern humans, beginning with the evolutionary history of primates – in particular genus Homo – and leading to the emergence of Homo sapiens as a distinct species of the hominid family, the great apes.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Human evolution · See more »
Human Y-chromosome DNA haplogroup
In human genetics, a human Y-chromosome DNA haplogroup is a haplogroup defined by mutations in the non-recombining portions of DNA from the Y-chromosome (called Y-DNA).
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Human Y-chromosome DNA haplogroup · See more »
Hypoxia (environmental)
Hypoxia refers to low oxygen conditions.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Hypoxia (environmental) · See more »
Iapetus Ocean
The Iapetus Ocean was an ocean that existed in the late Neoproterozoic and early Paleozoic eras of the geologic timescale (between 600 and 400 million years ago).
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Iapetus Ocean · See more »
Iberian Peninsula
The Iberian Peninsula, also known as Iberia, is located in the southwest corner of Europe.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Iberian Peninsula · See more »
Iceberg
An iceberg or ice mountain is a large piece of freshwater ice that has broken off a glacier or an ice shelf and is floating freely in open water.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Iceberg · See more »
Iceland
Iceland is a Nordic island country in the North Atlantic, with a population of and an area of, making it the most sparsely populated country in Europe.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Iceland · See more »
Iceland hotspot
The Iceland hotspot is a hotspot which is partly responsible for the high volcanic activity which has formed the island of Iceland.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Iceland hotspot · See more »
Iliad
The Iliad (Ἰλιάς, in Classical Attic; sometimes referred to as the Song of Ilion or Song of Ilium) is an ancient Greek epic poem in dactylic hexameter, traditionally attributed to Homer.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Iliad · See more »
Illex argentinus
Illex argentinus, commonly known as the Argentine shortfin squid is a species of squid in the family Ommastrephidae from the south western Atlantic Ocean.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Illex argentinus · See more »
Incineration
Incineration is a waste treatment process that involves the combustion of organic substances contained in waste materials.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Incineration · See more »
Indian Ocean
The Indian Ocean is the third largest of the world's oceanic divisions, covering (approximately 20% of the water on the Earth's surface).
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Indian Ocean · See more »
Indigenous peoples of the Americas
The indigenous peoples of the Americas are the pre-Columbian peoples of the Americas and their descendants. Although some indigenous peoples of the Americas were traditionally hunter-gatherers—and many, especially in the Amazon basin, still are—many groups practiced aquaculture and agriculture. The impact of their agricultural endowment to the world is a testament to their time and work in reshaping and cultivating the flora indigenous to the Americas. Although some societies depended heavily on agriculture, others practiced a mix of farming, hunting and gathering. In some regions the indigenous peoples created monumental architecture, large-scale organized cities, chiefdoms, states and empires. Many parts of the Americas are still populated by indigenous peoples; some countries have sizable populations, especially Belize, Bolivia, Canada, Chile, Ecuador, Greenland, Guatemala, Guyana, Mexico, Panama and Peru. At least a thousand different indigenous languages are spoken in the Americas. Some, such as the Quechuan languages, Aymara, Guaraní, Mayan languages and Nahuatl, count their speakers in millions. Many also maintain aspects of indigenous cultural practices to varying degrees, including religion, social organization and subsistence practices. Like most cultures, over time, cultures specific to many indigenous peoples have evolved to incorporate traditional aspects but also cater to modern needs. Some indigenous peoples still live in relative isolation from Western culture, and a few are still counted as uncontacted peoples.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Indigenous peoples of the Americas · See more »
Industrial Revolution
The Industrial Revolution was the transition to new manufacturing processes in the period from about 1760 to sometime between 1820 and 1840.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Industrial Revolution · See more »
International Hydrographic Organization
The International Hydrographic Organization (IHO) is the inter-governmental organisation representing hydrography.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and International Hydrographic Organization · See more »
International waters
The terms international waters or trans-boundary waters apply where any of the following types of bodies of water (or their drainage basins) transcend international boundaries: oceans, large marine ecosystems, enclosed or semi-enclosed regional seas and estuaries, rivers, lakes, groundwater systems (aquifers), and wetlands.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and International waters · See more »
Intertropical Convergence Zone
The Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ), known by sailors as the doldrums, is the area encircling Earth near the Equator, where the northeast and southeast trade winds converge.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Intertropical Convergence Zone · See more »
Inuit
The Inuit (ᐃᓄᐃᑦ, "the people") are a group of culturally similar indigenous peoples inhabiting the Arctic regions of Greenland, Canada and Alaska.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Inuit · See more »
Irish Sea
The Irish Sea (Muir Éireann / An Mhuir Mheann, Y Keayn Yernagh, Erse Sea, Muir Èireann, Ulster-Scots: Airish Sea, Môr Iwerddon) separates the islands of Ireland and Great Britain; linked to the Celtic Sea in the south by St George's Channel, and to the Inner Seas off the West Coast of Scotland in the north by the Straits of Moyle.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Irish Sea · See more »
John Cabot
John Cabot (Giovanni Caboto; c. 1450 – c. 1500) was a Venetian navigator and explorer whose 1497 discovery of the coast of North America under the commission of Henry VII of England was the first European exploration of coastal North America since the Norse visits to Vinland in the eleventh century.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and John Cabot · See more »
Laacher See
Laacher See or Lake Laach (in English) is a volcanic caldera lake with a diameter of in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany, about northwest of Koblenz and south of Bonn, and is closest to the town of Andernach situated to the east on the river Rhine.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Laacher See · See more »
Labrador Sea
The Labrador Sea (French: mer du Labrador, Danish: Labradorhavet) is an arm of the North Atlantic Ocean between the Labrador Peninsula and Greenland.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Labrador Sea · See more »
Labrador Sea Water
Labrador Sea Water (LSW) is an intermediate water mass characterized by cold water, relatively low salinity compared to other intermediate water masses, and high concentrations of both oxygen and anthropogenic tracers.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Labrador Sea Water · See more »
Lake Maracaibo
Lake Maracaibo (Lago de Maracaibo) is a large brackish tidal bay (or tidal estuary) in Venezuela and an "inlet of the Caribbean Sea." It is sometimes considered a lake rather than a bay or lagoon.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Lake Maracaibo · See more »
Lamont–Doherty Earth Observatory
The Lamont–Doherty Earth Observatory (LDEO) is a research unit of Columbia University located on a campus in Palisades, N.Y., north of Manhattan on the Hudson River.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Lamont–Doherty Earth Observatory · See more »
Landnámabók
Landnámabók (“Book of Settlements”), often shortened to Landnáma, is a medieval Icelandic written work which describes in considerable detail the settlement (''landnám'') of Iceland by the Norse in the 9th and 10th centuries CE.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Landnámabók · See more »
Landscape of the Pico Island Vineyard Culture
The Landscape of the Pico Island Vineyard Culture is a Unesco World Heritage Site on Pico Island.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Landscape of the Pico Island Vineyard Culture · See more »
Large igneous province
In geology, a large igneous province (LIP) is an extremely large accumulation of igneous rocks, including plutonic rocks (intrusive) or volcanic rock formations (extrusive), arising when hot magma extrudes from inside the Earth and flows out.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Large igneous province · See more »
Last Glacial Maximum
In the Earth's climate history the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) was the last time period during the last glacial period when ice sheets were at their greatest extension.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Last Glacial Maximum · See more »
Laurentian fan
The Laurentian fan or abyss is an underwater depression off the eastern coast of Canada in the Atlantic Ocean.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Laurentian fan · See more »
Laurentide Ice Sheet
The Laurentide Ice Sheet was a massive sheet of ice that covered millions of square kilometers, including most of Canada and a large portion of the northern United States, multiple times during the Quaternary glacial epochs— from 2.588 ± 0.005 million years ago to the present.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Laurentide Ice Sheet · See more »
List of countries and territories bordering the Atlantic Ocean
This is a list of states and territories (in italics) with a coastline on the Atlantic Ocean (including the Baltic and Mediterranean Seas) are.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and List of countries and territories bordering the Atlantic Ocean · See more »
List of epidemics
This article is a list of epidemics of infectious disease.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and List of epidemics · See more »
List of islands in the Atlantic Ocean
This is a list of islands in the Atlantic Ocean, the largest of which is Great Britain.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and List of islands in the Atlantic Ocean · See more »
List of ports and harbours of the Atlantic Ocean
This is a list of ports and harbours of the Atlantic Ocean, excluding the ports of the Baltic Sea.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and List of ports and harbours of the Atlantic Ocean · See more »
List of seas
This is a list of seas - large divisions of the World Ocean, including areas of water variously, gulfs, bights, bays, and straits.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and List of seas · See more »
Little Ice Age
The Little Ice Age (LIA) was a period of cooling that occurred after the Medieval Warm Period.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Little Ice Age · See more »
Lobster
Lobsters comprise a family (Nephropidae, sometimes also Homaridae) of large marine crustaceans.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Lobster · See more »
Lutjanidae
Snappers are a family of perciform fish, Lutjanidae, mainly marine, but with some members inhabiting estuaries, feeding in fresh water.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Lutjanidae · See more »
Mackerel
Mackerel is a common name applied to a number of different species of pelagic fish, mostly, but not exclusively, from the family Scombridae.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Mackerel · See more »
Mafic
Mafic is an adjective describing a silicate mineral or igneous rock that is rich in magnesium and iron, and is thus a portmanteau of magnesium and '''f'''err'''ic'''.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Mafic · See more »
Magdalenian
The Magdalenian (also Madelenian; French: Magdalénien) refers to one of the later cultures of the Upper Paleolithic in western Europe, dating from around 17,000 to 12,000 years ago.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Magdalenian · See more »
Magmatism
Magmatism is the emplacement of magma within and at the surface of the outer layers of a terrestrial planet, which solidifies as igneous rocks.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Magmatism · See more »
Manatee
Manatees (family Trichechidae, genus Trichechus) are large, fully aquatic, mostly herbivorous marine mammals sometimes known as sea cows. There are three accepted living species of Trichechidae, representing three of the four living species in the order Sirenia: the Amazonian manatee (Trichechus inunguis), the West Indian manatee (Trichechus manatus), and the West African manatee (Trichechus senegalensis).
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Manatee · See more »
Manganese nodule
Polymetallic nodules, also called manganese nodules, are rock concretions on the sea bottom formed of concentric layers of iron and manganese hydroxides around a core.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Manganese nodule · See more »
Marine debris
Marine debris, also known as marine litter, is human-created waste that has deliberately or accidentally been released in a lake, sea, ocean or waterway.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Marine debris · See more »
Marine isotope stage
Marine isotope stages (MIS), marine oxygen-isotope stages, or oxygen isotope stages (OIS), are alternating warm and cool periods in the Earth's paleoclimate, deduced from oxygen isotope data reflecting changes in temperature derived from data from deep sea core samples.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Marine isotope stage · See more »
Marine mammal
Marine mammals are aquatic mammals that rely on the ocean and other marine ecosystems for their existence.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Marine mammal · See more »
Marine pollution
Marine pollution occurs when harmful, or potentially harmful, effects result from the entry into the ocean of chemicals, particles, industrial, agricultural, and residential waste, noise, or the spread of invasive organisms.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Marine pollution · See more »
Mediterranean Sea
The Mediterranean Sea is a sea connected to the Atlantic Ocean, surrounded by the Mediterranean Basin and almost completely enclosed by land: on the north by Southern Europe and Anatolia, on the south by North Africa and on the east by the Levant.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Sea · See more »
Merluccius capensis
Merluccius capensis (shallow-water Cape hake or South African hake) is a ray-finned fish in the genus Merluccius, found in the south-eastern Atlantic Ocean, along the coast of South Africa.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Merluccius capensis · See more »
Merluccius paradoxus
Merluccius paradoxus, the deep-water Cape hake, is a merluccid hake of the genus Merluccius, found in the south-eastern Atlantic Ocean, along the coast of Southern Africa, south of Angola.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Merluccius paradoxus · See more »
Mid-Atlantic Ridge
The Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR) is a mid-ocean ridge, a divergent tectonic plate or constructive plate boundary located along the floor of the Atlantic Ocean, and part of the longest mountain range in the world.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Mid-Atlantic Ridge · See more »
Mid-ocean ridge
A mid-ocean ridge (MOR) is an underwater mountain system formed by plate tectonics.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Mid-ocean ridge · See more »
Midden
A midden (also kitchen midden or shell heap) is an old dump for domestic waste which may consist of animal bone, human excrement, botanical material, mollusc shells, sherds, lithics (especially debitage), and other artifacts and ecofacts associated with past human occupation.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Midden · See more »
Milwaukee Deep
Milwaukee Deep, also known as The Milwaukee Depth, is the deepest part of the Atlantic Ocean and is part of the Puerto Rico Trench.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Milwaukee Deep · See more »
Mitochondrial DNA
Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA or mDNA) is the DNA located in mitochondria, cellular organelles within eukaryotic cells that convert chemical energy from food into a form that cells can use, adenosine triphosphate (ATP).
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Mitochondrial DNA · See more »
Mixed layer
The oceanic or limnological mixed layer is a layer in which active turbulence has homogenized some range of depths.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Mixed layer · See more »
Nephrops norvegicus
Nephrops norvegicus, known variously as the Norway lobster, Dublin Bay prawn, langoustine (compare langostino) or scampi, is a slim, orange-pink lobster which grows up to long, and is "the most important commercial crustacean in Europe".
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Nephrops norvegicus · See more »
New World
The New World is one of the names used for the majority of Earth's Western Hemisphere, specifically the Americas (including nearby islands such as those of the Caribbean and Bermuda).
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and New World · See more »
Newfoundland (island)
Newfoundland (Terre-Neuve) is a large Canadian island off the east coast of the North American mainland, and the most populous part of the Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Newfoundland (island) · See more »
Norse colonization of North America
The Norse exploration of North America began in the late 10th century AD when Norsemen explored and settled areas of the North Atlantic including the northeastern fringes of North America.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Norse colonization of North America · See more »
North American Plate
The North American Plate is a tectonic plate covering most of North America, Greenland, Cuba, the Bahamas, extreme northeastern Asia, and parts of Iceland and the Azores.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and North American Plate · See more »
North Atlantic Current
The North Atlantic Current (NAC), also known as North Atlantic Drift and North Atlantic Sea Movement, is a powerful warm western boundary current that extends the Gulf Stream north-eastward.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and North Atlantic Current · See more »
North Atlantic Deep Water
North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) is a deep water mass formed in the North Atlantic Ocean.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and North Atlantic Deep Water · See more »
North Atlantic Gyre
The North Atlantic Gyre, located in the Atlantic Ocean, is one of the five major oceanic gyres.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and North Atlantic Gyre · See more »
North Atlantic oscillation
The North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) is a weather phenomenon in the North Atlantic Ocean of fluctuations in the difference of atmospheric pressure at sea level (SLP) between the Icelandic low and the Azores high.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and North Atlantic oscillation · See more »
North Equatorial Current
The North Equatorial Current is a significant Pacific and Atlantic Ocean current that flows east-to-west between about 10° north and 20° north.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and North Equatorial Current · See more »
North Pole
The North Pole, also known as the Geographic North Pole or Terrestrial North Pole, is (subject to the caveats explained below) defined as the point in the Northern Hemisphere where the Earth's axis of rotation meets its surface.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and North Pole · See more »
North Sea
The North Sea (Mare Germanicum) is a marginal sea of the Atlantic Ocean located between Great Britain, Scandinavia, Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium, and France.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and North Sea · See more »
Norwegian Sea
The Norwegian Sea (Norskehavet) is a marginal sea in the Arctic Ocean, northwest of Norway.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Norwegian Sea · See more »
Nuclear weapons testing
Nuclear weapons tests are experiments carried out to determine the effectiveness, yield, and explosive capability of nuclear weapons.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Nuclear weapons testing · See more »
Ocean
An ocean (the sea of classical antiquity) is a body of saline water that composes much of a planet's hydrosphere.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Ocean · See more »
Ocean gyre
In oceanography, a gyre is any large system of circulating ocean currents, particularly those involved with large wind movements.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Ocean gyre · See more »
Oceanic basin
In hydrology, an oceanic basin may be anywhere on Earth that is covered by seawater but geologically ocean basins are large geologic basins that are below sea level.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Oceanic basin · See more »
Oceanic plateau
An oceanic or submarine plateau is a large, relatively flat elevation that is higher than the surrounding relief with one or more relatively steep sides.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Oceanic plateau · See more »
Oceanic trench
Oceanic trenches are topographic depressions of the sea floor, relatively narrow in width, but very long.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Oceanic trench · See more »
Oceanus
Oceanus (Ὠκεανός Ōkeanós), also known as Ogenus (Ὤγενος Ōgenos or Ὠγηνός Ōgēnos) or Ogen (Ὠγήν Ōgēn), was a divine figure in classical antiquity, believed by the ancient Greeks and Romans to be the divine personification of the sea, an enormous river encircling the world.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Oceanus · See more »
Odyssey
The Odyssey (Ὀδύσσεια Odýsseia, in Classical Attic) is one of two major ancient Greek epic poems attributed to Homer.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Odyssey · See more »
Oil spill
An oil spill is the release of a liquid petroleum hydrocarbon into the environment, especially the marine ecosystem, due to human activity, and is a form of pollution.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Oil spill · See more »
Old World
The term "Old World" is used in the West to refer to Africa, Asia and Europe (Afro-Eurasia or the World Island), regarded collectively as the part of the world known to its population before contact with the Americas and Oceania (the "New World").
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Old World · See more »
Overfishing
Overfishing is the removal of a species of fish from a body of water at a rate that the species cannot replenish in time, resulting in those species either becoming depleted or very underpopulated in that given area.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Overfishing · See more »
Pacific Ocean
The Pacific Ocean is the largest and deepest of Earth's oceanic divisions.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Pacific Ocean · See more »
Pandalus borealis
Pandalus borealis is a species of caridean shrimp found in cold parts of the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Pandalus borealis · See more »
Pangaea
Pangaea or Pangea was a supercontinent that existed during the late Paleozoic and early Mesozoic eras.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Pangaea · See more »
Pannonian Basin
The Pannonian Basin, or Carpathian Basin, is a large basin in Central Europe.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Pannonian Basin · See more »
Panthalassa
Panthalassa, also known as the Panthalassic or Panthalassan Ocean, (from Greek πᾶν "all" and θάλασσα "sea"), was the superocean that surrounded the supercontinent Pangaea.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Panthalassa · See more »
Paraná and Etendeka traps
The Paraná-Etendeka traps (or Paraná and Etendeka Plateau; or Paraná and Etendeka Province) comprise a large igneous province that includes both the main Paraná traps (in Paraná Basin, a South American geological basin) as well as the smaller severed portions of the flood basalts at the Etendeka traps (in northwest Namibia and southwest Angola).
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Paraná and Etendeka traps · See more »
Passive margin
A passive margin is the transition between oceanic and continental lithosphere that is not an active plate margin.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Passive margin · See more »
Paul S. Martin
Paul S. Martin (born in Allentown, Pennsylvania, 1928 - died in Tucson, Arizona September 13, 2010Mari N. Jensen.. University of Arizona. Retrieved 2010-09-17.) was an American geoscientist at the University of Arizona who developed the theory that the Pleistocene extinction of large mammals worldwide was caused by overhunting by humans.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Paul S. Martin · See more »
Pedro Álvares Cabral
Pedro Álvares Cabral (or; c. 1467 or 1468 – c. 1520) was a Portuguese nobleman, military commander, navigator and explorer regarded as the discoverer of Brazil.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Pedro Álvares Cabral · See more »
Pelagic fish
Pelagic fish live in the pelagic zone of ocean or lake waters – being neither close to the bottom nor near the shore – in contrast with demersal fish, which do live on or near the bottom, and reef fish, which are associated with coral reefs.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Pelagic fish · See more »
Petrel
Petrels are tube-nosed seabirds in the bird order Procellariiformes.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Petrel · See more »
Pillars of Hercules
The Pillars of Hercules (Latin: Columnae Herculis, Greek: Ἡράκλειαι Στῆλαι, Arabic: أعمدة هرقل / Aʿmidat Hiraql, Spanish: Columnas de Hércules) was the phrase that was applied in Antiquity to the promontories that flank the entrance to the Strait of Gibraltar.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Pillars of Hercules · See more »
Pillow lava
Pillow lavas are lavas that contain characteristic pillow-shaped structures that are attributed to the extrusion of the lava under water, or subaqueous extrusion.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Pillow lava · See more »
Pinniped
Pinnipeds, commonly known as seals, are a widely distributed and diverse clade of carnivorous, fin-footed, semiaquatic marine mammals.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Pinniped · See more »
Piracy in the Atlantic World
Piracy was a phenomenon that was not limited to the Caribbean region.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Piracy in the Atlantic World · See more »
Placer deposit
In geology, a placer deposit or placer is an accumulation of valuable minerals formed by gravity separation from a specific source rock during sedimentary processes.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Placer deposit · See more »
Plate tectonics
Plate tectonics (from the Late Latin tectonicus, from the τεκτονικός "pertaining to building") is a scientific theory describing the large-scale motion of seven large plates and the movements of a larger number of smaller plates of the Earth's lithosphere, since tectonic processes began on Earth between 3 and 3.5 billion years ago.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Plate tectonics · See more »
Pollachius virens
The saithe, (Pollachius virens) is a species of marine fish in the Pollachius genus.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Pollachius virens · See more »
Porcupine Bank
Porcupine Bank is an area of the Irish shelf, on the fringes of the Atlantic Ocean approximately west of Ireland.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Porcupine Bank · See more »
Pre-Columbian trans-oceanic contact theories
Pre-Columbian trans-oceanic contact theories relate to visits or interactions with the Americas and/or indigenous peoples of the Americas by people from Africa, Asia, Europe, or Oceania before Columbus's first voyage to the Caribbean in 1492.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Pre-Columbian trans-oceanic contact theories · See more »
Precipitation
In meteorology, precipitation is any product of the condensation of atmospheric water vapor that falls under gravity.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Precipitation · See more »
Puerto Rico Trench
The Puerto Rico Trench is located on the boundary between the Caribbean Sea and the Atlantic Ocean.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Puerto Rico Trench · See more »
Recent African origin of modern humans
In paleoanthropology, the recent African origin of modern humans, also called the "Out of Africa" theory (OOA), recent single-origin hypothesis (RSOH), replacement hypothesis, or recent African origin model (RAO), is the dominant model of the geographic origin and early migration of anatomically modern humans (Homo sapiens).
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Recent African origin of modern humans · See more »
Redfish
Redfish is a common name for several species of fish.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Redfish · See more »
Rift valley
A rift valley is a linear-shaped lowland between several highlands or mountain ranges created by the action of a geologic rift or fault.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Rift valley · See more »
Rio Grande Rise
The Rio Grande Rise is an aseismic ocean ridge in the southern Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Brazil.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Rio Grande Rise · See more »
Rocas Atoll
The Rocas Atoll (Atol das Rocas) is the only atoll in the South Atlantic Ocean.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Rocas Atoll · See more »
Romanche Trench
The Romanche Trench, also called the Romanche Furrow or Romanche Gap, is the third deepest of the major trenches of the Atlantic Ocean, after the Puerto Rico Trench and the South Sandwich Trench.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Romanche Trench · See more »
Round sardinella
The round sardinella (Sardinella aurita) is a species of ray-finned fish in the genus Sardinella found in both sides of the Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Round sardinella · See more »
Salinity
Salinity is the saltiness or amount of salt dissolved in a body of water (see also soil salinity).
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Salinity · See more »
Sand
Sand is a naturally occurring granular material composed of finely divided rock and mineral particles.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Sand · See more »
Sand eel
Sand eel or sandeel is the common name used for a considerable number of species of fish.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Sand eel · See more »
Sardinella brasiliensis
Sardinella brasiliensis, (Brazilian sardinella or orangespot sardine) is a species of ray-finned fish in the genus Sardinella.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Sardinella brasiliensis · See more »
Sardinops
Sardinops is a monotypic genus of sardines of the family Clupeidae.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Sardinops · See more »
Sargassum
Sargassum is a genus of brown (class Phaeophyceae) macroalgae (seaweed) in the order Fucales.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Sargassum · See more »
Sargassum fish
The sargassum fish, anglerfish, or frog fish, Histrio histrio, is a frogfish of the family Antennariidae, the only species in its genus.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Sargassum fish · See more »
Scotia Arc
The Scotia Arc is the island arc system forming the north, east and south border of the Scotia Sea.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Scotia Arc · See more »
Scotia Sea
The Scotia Sea is a sea located at the northern edge of the Southern Ocean at its boundary with the South Atlantic Ocean.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Scotia Sea · See more »
Scotian Shelf
The Scotian Shelf is a geological formation, part of the Continental shelf, located southwest of Nova Scotia, Canada.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Scotian Shelf · See more »
Sea ice
Sea ice arises as seawater freezes.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Sea ice · See more »
Seafloor spreading
Seafloor spreading is a process that occurs at mid-ocean ridges, where new oceanic crust is formed through volcanic activity and then gradually moves away from the ridge.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Seafloor spreading · See more »
Seamount
A seamount is a mountain rising from the ocean seafloor that does not reach to the water's surface (sea level), and thus is not an island, islet or cliff-rock.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Seamount · See more »
Sebastes
Sebastes is a genus of fish in the family Sebastidae (though some include this in Scorpaenidae), most of which have the common name of rockfish.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Sebastes · See more »
Sedimentary rock
Sedimentary rocks are types of rock that are formed by the deposition and subsequent cementation of that material at the Earth's surface and within bodies of water.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Sedimentary rock · See more »
Settlement of the Americas
Paleolithic hunter-gatherers first entered North America from the North Asian Mammoth steppe via the Beringia land bridge which had formed between northeastern Siberia and western Alaska due to the lowering of sea level during the Last Glacial Maximum.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Settlement of the Americas · See more »
Seven Seas
The "Seven Seas" (as in the idiom "sail the Seven Seas") is an ancient phrase for all of the world's oceans.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Seven Seas · See more »
Shutdown of thermohaline circulation
A shutdown or slowdown of the thermohaline circulation is an effect of global warming on a major ocean circulation.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Shutdown of thermohaline circulation · See more »
Sicily
Sicily (Sicilia; Sicìlia) is the largest island in the Mediterranean Sea.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Sicily · See more »
Slavery in Brazil
Slavery in Brazil began long before the first Portuguese settlement was established in 1532, as members of one tribe would enslave captured members of another.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Slavery in Brazil · See more »
Slavery in Britain
Slavery in Great Britain existed and was recognized from before the Roman occupation until the 12th century, when chattel slavery disappeared after the Norman Conquest.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Slavery in Britain · See more »
Slavery in the United States
Slavery in the United States was the legal institution of human chattel enslavement, primarily of Africans and African Americans, that existed in the United States of America in the 18th and 19th centuries.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Slavery in the United States · See more »
Solutrean hypothesis
The Solutrean hypothesis on the peopling of the Americas claims that the earliest human migration to the Americas took place from Europe, during the Last Glacial Maximum.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Solutrean hypothesis · See more »
South American Plate
The South American Plate is a tectonic plate which includes the continent of South America and also a sizeable region of the Atlantic Ocean seabed extending eastward to the African Plate creating the Mid-Atlantic Ridge The easterly side is a divergent boundary with the African Plate forming the southern part of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and South American Plate · See more »
South Atlantic Gyre
The South Atlantic Gyre is the subtropical gyre in the south Atlantic Ocean.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and South Atlantic Gyre · See more »
South Sandwich Trench
The South Sandwich Trench is a deep arcuate trench in the South Atlantic Ocean lying 100 km to the east of the South Sandwich Islands.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and South Sandwich Trench · See more »
Southern African anchovy
The Southern African anchovy (Engraulis capensis) is a species of anchovy which occurs in the southeast Atlantic Ocean near Namibia and South Africa.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Southern African anchovy · See more »
Southern Ocean
The Southern Ocean, also known as the Antarctic Ocean or the Austral Ocean, comprises the southernmost waters of the World Ocean, generally taken to be south of 60° S latitude and encircling Antarctica.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Southern Ocean · See more »
Spiny dogfish
The spiny dogfish, spurdog, mud shark, or piked dogfish (Squalus acanthias) is one of the best known species of the Squalidae (dogfish) family of sharks, which is part of the Squaliformes order.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Spiny dogfish · See more »
Stesichorus
Stesichorus (Στησίχορος, Stēsikhoros; c. 630 – 555 BC) was the first great lyric poet of the West.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Stesichorus · See more »
Strait of Gibraltar
The Strait of Gibraltar (مضيق جبل طارق, Estrecho de Gibraltar) is a narrow strait that connects the Atlantic Ocean to the Mediterranean Sea and separates Gibraltar and Peninsular Spain in Europe from Morocco and Ceuta (Spain) in Africa.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Strait of Gibraltar · See more »
Submarine canyon
A submarine canyon is a steep-sided valley cut into the seabed of the continental slope, sometimes extending well onto the continental shelf, having nearly vertical walls, and occasionally having canyon wall heights of up to 5 km, from canyon floor to canyon rim, as with the Great Bahama Canyon.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Submarine canyon · See more »
Subtropics
The subtropics are geographic and climate zones located roughly between the tropics at latitude 23.5° (the Tropic of Cancer and Tropic of Capricorn) and temperate zones (normally referring to latitudes 35–66.5°) north and south of the Equator.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Subtropics · See more »
Sverdrup
In oceanography, a sverdrup (symbol: Sv) is a non-SI unit of flow, with equal to.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Sverdrup · See more »
Tethys Ocean
The Tethys Ocean (Ancient Greek: Τηθύς), Tethys Sea or Neotethys was an ocean during much of the Mesozoic Era located between the ancient continents of Gondwana and Laurasia, before the opening of the Indian and Atlantic oceans during the Cretaceous Period.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Tethys Ocean · See more »
The World Factbook
The World Factbook, also known as the CIA World Factbook, is a reference resource produced by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) with almanac-style information about the countries of the world.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and The World Factbook · See more »
Thermocline
A thermocline (also known as the thermal layer or the metalimnion in lakes) is a thin but distinct layer in a large body of fluid (e.g. water, such as an ocean or lake) or air (such as an atmosphere) in which temperature changes more rapidly with depth than it does in the layers above or below.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Thermocline · See more »
Thermohaline circulation
Thermohaline circulation (THC) is a part of the large-scale ocean circulation that is driven by global density gradients created by surface heat and freshwater fluxes.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Thermohaline circulation · See more »
Tide
Tides are the rise and fall of sea levels caused by the combined effects of the gravitational forces exerted by the Moon and the Sun and the rotation of Earth.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Tide · See more »
Titan (mythology)
In Greek mythology, the Titans (Greek: Τιτάν, Titán, Τiτᾶνες, Titânes) and Titanesses (or Titanides; Greek: Τιτανίς, Titanís, Τιτανίδες, Titanídes) were members of the second generation of divine beings, descending from the primordial deities and preceding the Olympians.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Titan (mythology) · See more »
Transatlantic crossing
The Transatlantic crossings are passages of passengers and cargo across the Atlantic Ocean between the Americas and Europe or Africa.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Transatlantic crossing · See more »
Triassic–Jurassic extinction event
The Triassic–Jurassic extinction event marks the boundary between the Triassic and Jurassic periods,, and is one of the major extinction events of the Phanerozoic eon, profoundly affecting life on land and in the oceans.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Triassic–Jurassic extinction event · See more »
Tristan hotspot
The Tristan hotspot is a volcanic hotspot which is responsible for the volcanic activity which forms the volcanoes in the southern Atlantic Ocean.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Tristan hotspot · See more »
Tropical cyclone
A tropical cyclone is a rapidly rotating storm system characterized by a low-pressure center, a closed low-level atmospheric circulation, strong winds, and a spiral arrangement of thunderstorms that produce heavy rain.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Tropical cyclone · See more »
United States Hydrographic Office
The United States Hydrographic Office prepared and published maps, charts, and nautical books required in navigation.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and United States Hydrographic Office · See more »
Vasco da Gama
Vasco da Gama, 1st Count of Vidigueira (c. 1460s – 24 December 1524), was a Portuguese explorer and the first European to reach India by sea.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Vasco da Gama · See more »
Vegetative reproduction
Vegetative reproduction (also known as vegetative propagation, vegetative multiplication or vegetative cloning) is any form of asexual reproduction occurring in plants in which a new plant grows from a fragment of the parent plant or grows from a specialized reproductive structure.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Vegetative reproduction · See more »
Voyages of Christopher Columbus
In 1492, a Spanish-based transatlantic maritime expedition led by Christopher Columbus encountered the Americas, a continent which was largely unknown in Europe and outside the Old World political and economic system.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Voyages of Christopher Columbus · See more »
Walvis Ridge
The Walvis Ridge (walvis means whale in Dutch and Afrikaans) is an aseismic ocean ridge in the southern Atlantic Ocean.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Walvis Ridge · See more »
Water mass
An oceanographic water mass is identifiable body of water with a common formation history which has physical properties distinct from surrounding water.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Water mass · See more »
Wild fisheries
A fishery is an area with an associated fish or aquatic population which is harvested for its commercial value.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Wild fisheries · See more »
Wilson cycle
The Wilson cycle is a model where a continent rifts, forms an ocean basin in-between, and then begins a process of convergence that leads to the collision of the two plates and closure of the ocean.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Wilson cycle · See more »
Wind shear
Wind shear (or windshear), sometimes referred to as wind gradient, is a difference in wind speed and/or direction over a relatively short distance in the atmosphere.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Wind shear · See more »
Witch (righteye flounder)
Glyptocephalus cynoglossus, known in English by a variety of common names including the witch, witch flounder, pole flounder, craig fluke, Torbay sole and grey sole, is a species of flatfish from the family Pleuronectidae.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Witch (righteye flounder) · See more »
World Digital Library
The World Digital Library (WDL) is an international digital library operated by UNESCO and the United States Library of Congress.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and World Digital Library · See more »
World Heritage site
A World Heritage site is a landmark or area which is selected by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) as having cultural, historical, scientific or other form of significance, and is legally protected by international treaties.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and World Heritage site · See more »
World Ocean
The World Ocean or Global Ocean (colloquially the sea or the ocean) is the interconnected system of Earth's oceanic waters, and comprises the bulk of the hydrosphere, covering (70.8%) of Earth's surface, with a total volume of.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and World Ocean · See more »
Yellowtail flounder
The yellowtail flounder (Limanda ferruginea) is a species of fish in the family Pleuronectidae.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and Yellowtail flounder · See more »
15th parallel north
The 15th parallel north is a circle of latitude that is 15 degrees north of the Earth's equatorial plane.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and 15th parallel north · See more »
16th parallel north
The 16th parallel north is a circle of latitude that is 16 degrees north of the Earth's equatorial plane.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and 16th parallel north · See more »
20th meridian east
The meridian 20° east of Greenwich is a line of longitude that extends from the North Pole across the Arctic Ocean, Europe, Africa, the Atlantic and Indian oceans, the Southern Ocean, and Antarctica to the South Pole.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and 20th meridian east · See more »
25th parallel north
The 25th parallel north is a circle of latitude that is 25 degrees north of the Earth's equatorial plane.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and 25th parallel north · See more »
25th parallel south
The 25th parallel south is a circle of latitude that is 25 degrees south of the Earth's equatorial plane, just south of the Tropic of Capricorn.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and 25th parallel south · See more »
40th parallel north
The 40th parallel north is a circle of latitude that is 40 degrees north of the Earth's equatorial plane.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and 40th parallel north · See more »
42nd parallel south
The 42nd parallel south is a circle of latitude that is 42 degrees south of the Earth's equatorial plane.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and 42nd parallel south · See more »
53rd parallel north
The 53rd parallel north is a circle of latitude that is 53 degrees north of the Earth's equatorial plane.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and 53rd parallel north · See more »
60th parallel north
The 60th parallel north is a circle of latitude that is 60 degrees north of Earth's equator.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and 60th parallel north · See more »
60th parallel south
The 60th parallel south is a circle of latitude that is 60 degrees south of the Earth's equatorial plane.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and 60th parallel south · See more »
8th parallel north
The 8th parallel north is a circle of latitude that is 8 degrees north of the Earth's equatorial plane.
New!!: Atlantic Ocean and 8th parallel north · See more »
Redirects here:
Across the pond, Altantic Ocean, Altantic ocean, Antlantic Ocean, Atlantic, Atlantic (ocean), Atlantic Basic, Atlantic Basin, Atlantic Oceans, Atlantic Sea, Atlantic basic, Atlantic basin, Atlantic ocean, Atlantis Thalassa, Central Atlantic, East Atlantic, Environmental issues in the Atlantic Ocean, Great Western Ocean, North Atlantic, North Atlantic Ocean, North Atlantic fisheries, North Atlantic ocean, North-East Atlantic, Northern Atlantic, Occidental Ocean, Oceanvs Occidentalis, Sea of Atlas, South Atlantic, South Atlantic Ocean, Southern Atlantic Ocean, The Atlantic Ocean, The pond.
References
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlantic_Ocean