Why this matters now
Ocean-floor relief and salinity/temperature patterns are tested directly, and they connect to fisheries, resources (the continental shelf) and ocean circulation.
Relief of the ocean floor
| Feature | Description |
|---|---|
| Continental shelf | Shallow, gently sloping submerged edge of the continent; richest in fish & resources |
| Continental slope | Steep descent to the deep ocean |
| Abyssal plain | Vast, flat deep-ocean floor |
| Mid-ocean ridge | Submarine mountain range where new crust forms |
| Ocean trench | Deepest parts (e.g. Mariana Trench) at subduction zones |
Temperature of ocean water
Sea-surface temperature is highest near the equator and decreases toward the poles, and it falls with depth. A zone of rapid temperature decrease — the thermocline — separates the warm surface layer from the cold deep water.
Salinity of ocean water
Salinity (average ~35 parts per thousand) is the salt content of seawater. It is higher where evaporation exceeds precipitation/inflow (e.g. enclosed seas — the Dead Sea and Red Sea are very saline) and lower near the equator (heavy rain), the poles (ice melt) and river mouths (freshwater inflow).
Significance
The shelf hosts most marine life and offshore oil/gas; salinity and temperature differences drive density currents (thermohaline circulation) and affect marine ecosystems and even shipping.
UPSC angle
Order the ocean-floor relief (shelf→slope→abyssal plain→trench), know the continental shelf’s importance, the thermocline, and high/low salinity zones (Dead Sea vs equator/poles/river mouths).
Frequently asked questions
What is the continental shelf?
The shallow, gently sloping submerged edge of a continent — the richest zone for fisheries and offshore oil and gas.
What is the deepest part of the ocean?
Ocean trenches, such as the Mariana Trench, found at subduction zones.
What is the average salinity of ocean water?
About 35 parts per thousand (ppt), though it varies with evaporation, rainfall and freshwater inflow.
Where is ocean salinity highest?
In areas of high evaporation and low inflow, such as enclosed seas — the Dead Sea and Red Sea are highly saline.