Past, present, and future of continental-margin physiographic provinces.—It takes only a little imagination to see a historical or genetic sequence in the four profiles of Plate 26. The Puerto Rico Trench—outer-ridge profiles thus may represent a continental margin in youth, the Blake—Bahama—outer-ridge profile a margin in late youth or early maturity, and Newfoundland and northeast United States profiles a margin in late maturity or old age.
The lens of sediments that has filled the marginal trench off northeastern United States is truly geosynclinal in thickness (Drake et al., in press). The sediments of the shelf lens are similar in lithology to the orthoquartzite suite of a mio-geosyncline (cf. Kay, 1951), and the thicker continental-rise lens is probably similar in lithology to the graywacke-volcanic suite of a eugeosyncline. (Kay, 1951). It seems virtually certain that ancient orthogeosynclines were, before deformation, closely analogous to the continental margins. The major problem is completing the sequence from filled geosyncline to folded mountains is the mechanism by which the earth's crust beneath the geosyncline thickens by 20-30 km. Although we cannot predict the future of the present continental margin with any assurance until the mechanism of thickening is understood, it seems probable that before deformation the older orthogeosynclines were similar in most details to the modern continental margins.
It seems possible that the present continental margins will in some future geological period be uplifted into folded mountains.
OCEAN-BASIN FLOOR
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
The second of the three basic topographic divisions of the oceanic depression is the ocean-basin floor. Included in this division are those provinces of the oceanic depression that are not included in the continental margin or the mid-oceanic ridge.
The ocean-basin floor is divided into three categories: (1) abyssal floor, (2) oceanic rises, and (3) seamounts and seamount groups. The first category includes two types of provinces, abyssal plains and abyssal hills, which occupy the deepest portion of the ocean-basin floor. Included in these provinces are such features as abyssal gaps and mid-ocean canyons. The second category includes the larger positive features of the ocean-basin floor, and the large seamounts and seamount groups fall in the third category. The landward limit of the ocean-basin floor is the 1:1000 gradient isopleth along the continental margin. Along the mid-oceanic ridge the boundary is taken as that scarp or scarp zone where the average level rises appreciably above the axis of maximum depth of the basin floor. Broad elevations which rise above the basin floor as isolated rises are termed oceanic rises and are included in this discussion even though they may be structurally more closely related to the mid-oceanic ridge or the continental margin.