Service Description: The sill geomorphic feature layer represents the spatial extent of the sills of the worlds oceans based on interpretation of the SRTM30 plus v7 global bathymetry model. The layer is one of the 25 layers that make up the global seafloor geomorphic features map (Harris et.al. 2014). The global seafloor geomorphic features map is intended to support ocean management including feature inventories, spatial planning and biodiversity conservation.
Service ItemId: 2f5ccb15b5b241cc8cb487dbbbc096a0
Has Versioned Data: false
Max Record Count: 2000
Supported query Formats: JSON
Supports applyEdits with GlobalIds: False
Supports Shared Templates: False
All Layers and Tables
Layers:
Description: The sill geomorphic feature layer represents the spatial extent of the sills of the worlds oceans based on interpretation of the SRTM30 plus v7 global bathymetry model. The layer is one of the 25 layers that make up the global seafloor geomorphic features map (Harris et.al. 2014). Sills are “a sea floor barrier of relatively shallow depth restricting water movement between basins” (IHO, 2008). Thus every basin has a sill, over which fluid would escape if the basin were filled to overflowing. The identification of sills in this study is based on selecting contours at a specified interval of 10 m (shelf except for Antarctica), 50 m (Antarctic shelf) or 100 m (all other areas) depending upon the location. Selecting the most shoal, closed contour defines the basin; one contour interval above this typically identifies a discrete location where contours “escape” from the basin and join into the regional bathymetry. This location is mapped as the sill. Sills were mapped for all of the major ocean basins and seas and for the larger basins perched on the continental shelf; sills were not mapped for the smaller basins perched on the slope or shelf or for the smaller abyssal basins.
Copyright Text: The global seafloor geomorphic features map has been produced through a collaboration between Geoscience Australia, GRID-Arendal and Conservation International.
Reference: Harris et. al. (2014) Geomorphology of the oceans.Marine Geology (in Press)
Spatial Reference: 4326 (4326)
Initial Extent:
XMin: -111.537636384832
YMin: -95.7193149139418
XMax: 50.6639054582375
YMax: 20.4890786198481
Spatial Reference: 4326 (4326)
Full Extent:
XMin: -180.000000000799
YMin: -78.6869716645107
XMax: 180.000000001899
YMax: 90.0000000001
Spatial Reference: 4326 (4326)
Units: esriDecimalDegrees
Child Resources:
Info
Supported Operations:
Query
ConvertFormat
Get Estimates