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Oceanic trench

The oceanic trenches are hemispheric-scale long but narrow topographic depressions of the sea floor.

They also are the deepest parts of the ocean floor.

Trenches define one of the most important natural boundaries on the Earth’s solid surface, that between two lithospheric plates.

There are three types of lithospheric plate boundaries: divergent (where lithosphere and oceanic crust is created at mid-ocean ridges), convergent (where one lithospheric plate sinks beneath another and returns to the mantle), and transform (where two lithospheric plates slide past each other).

Trenches are the spectacular and distinctive morphological features of convergent plate boundaries.

Plates move together along convergent plate boundaries at convergence rates that vary from a few millimetres to ten or more centimetres per year.

A trench marks the position at which the flexed, subducting slab begins to descend beneath another lithospheric slab.

Trenches are generally parallel to a volcanic island arc, and trenches about 200 km from a volcanic arc.

Oceanic trenches typically extend 3 to 4 km (1.9 to 2.5 mi) below the level of the surrounding oceanic floor.

The deepest ocean depth to be sounded is in the Challenger Deep of the Mariana Trench at a depth of 10,911 m (35,798 ft) below sea level.

Oceanic lithosphere disappears into trenches at a global rate of about a tenth of a square metre per second.

For more information about the topic Oceanic trench, read the full article at Wikipedia.org, or see the following related articles:

Note: This page refers to an article that is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the article Oceanic trench at Wikipedia.org. See the Wikipedia copyright page for more details.

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