The same general succession of topographic features is shown in a echogram (Pl. 7, fig. 2) taken along a southeast-northwest line east of Daytona Beach, Florida. The small definite notch at 26 fathoms is present, but a significant difference between the two echograms is seen between 90 and 300 fathoms. On the Charleston profile a steep 1:40 gradient slope marks this depth range, while, on the Daytona Beach profile, the gradient is relatively gentle (1:180); small but probably significant benches are found at 225, 270, 290, 375, and 385 fathoms. Both profiles have the same characteristic rugged 5- to 15-fathom hills at 400 fathoms at a point underlying the Gulf Stream. On the Charleston profile a broad, gently fractured arch separates the continental slope from the smooth outer part of the Blake Plateau. The small, sharp-crested hills noted on the Daytona Beach and Charleston profiles are also found at the north end of the Straits of Florida (Pl. 4, fig. 2).

Blake Escarpment.—Profiles W-23, W-24, and W-25 and Figure 18 illustrate the form of the Blake Escarpment. The outer edge of the Blake Plateau abruptly breaks off at about 600 fathoms. Here gradients increase to 1:30. This segment continues with a few minor breaks to a depth of 1200 to 1500 fathoms where a narrow bench or at least a major break in slope occurs. Below this bench the escarpment drops so steeply that only a few side echoes are recorded. The gradient here exceeds 1:2 in several profiles. At 2400 fathoms there is in places another narrow bench, but on other profiles the abyssal plain of the floor of the Blake-Bahama Basin lies directly at the foot of the steepest segment. A peculiar fact is that along many east-west cross sections the deepest point in the basin lies directly at the foot of the escarpment. A similar deepening adjacent to the Campeche and West Florida escarpments in the Gulf of Mexico has been reported (Ewing, Ericson, Heezen, 1958).

Antilles Outer Ridge.—South of Cape Hatteras a ridge ranging in width from 60 to 200 miles lies about 100 miles east of the Blake Escarpment and the Bahama Banks. The ridge has two parallel crests 100 miles apart which both plunge to the south. At 30°N. the crests average about 1600 fathoms in depth, but at 25°N. they are 2750 fathoms, a drop of nearly 1000 fathoms in 300 miles. The smooth rolling topography of the ridge between Cape Hatteras and 24°N. resembles the continental rise off New York or, in some areas, the somewhat stronger relief of the Bermuda Plateau of the central Bermuda Rise (Pl. 5, figs. 1, 2).

South of 24°N. and in the vicinity of Hispaniola the ridge is poorly known and difficult to study because of its low relief and the large errors in most nonprecision soundings taken in such a great depth of water. North of Puerto Rico the outer ridge appears as a clearly defined feature between the Puerto Rico Trench on the south and the Nares Abyssal Plain on the north. Again there are two parallel crests 60 miles apart marked by low relief of 20 to 100 fathoms at a depth of 2750 fathoms.

The Antilles Outer Ridge, continuing to the east, merges with the Lower Step of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. But more probably it skirts the Lesser Antilles to join the continental rise off South America. The crest zone is covered by Globigerina ooze in the north and red clay in the south; it is isolated from the silty clays of the continental slope except on its northwest flank. Sub-bottom echoes appear on fathograms taken across the outer ridge. Data suggest that a prominent 8- to 10-fathom sub-bottom interface extends over the outer ridge between San Salvador and 30°N. (Pl. 6).

Bahamas Sector.—The Bahamas sector can be divided into two parts: (1) the broad (200 miles wide) northern area dominated by broad, shallow banks broken by relatively narrow, deep (ca. 1000 fathoms) tongues or channels; (2) the narrow southeastern part where the banks decrease in area and the tongues deepen (to 2200 fathoms) and widen. This southeastern part tapers to the east in the direction of the Puerto Rico Trench. The southeast tip of this area is formed by Navidad Bank, whose eastern slopes drop to the floor of the Puerto Rico Trench.

Figure 18.—Tracing of PDR record of Blake Escarpment

No soundings were recorded between 1600 and 2400 fathoms, a common difficulty on this precipitous escarpment. Note how Blake-Bahama Abyssal Plain slopes toward the base of the escarpment.