Arctic Ocean

The Arctic is the smallest and shallowest of the world's five major oceans.

It spans an area of approximately 14,060,000 km2 (5,430,000 sq mi) and is also known as the coldest of all the oceans.

It has been described approximately as an estuary of the Atlantic .

It is also seen as the northernmost part of the all-encompassing World .

The Arctic includes the North Pole in the middle of the Northern Hemisphere and extends south to about 60°N. The Arctic is surrounded by Eurasia and , and the borders follow topographic features: the Bering Strait on the Pacific side and the Greenland Ridge on the Atlantic side.

It is mostly covered by ice throughout the year and almost completely in winter.

The Arctic 's surface and salinity vary seasonally as the ice cover melts and freezes; its salinity is the lowest on average of the five major oceans, due to low evaporation, heavy fresh inflow from and , and limited connection and outflow to surrounding oceanic waters with higher salinities.

The shrinking of the ice has been quoted at 50%.

The US National Snow and Ice Center (NSIDC) uses satellite to provide a daily record of Arctic ice cover and the rate of melting compared to an average period and specific past years, showing a continuous decline in ice extent.

In September 2012, the Arctic ice extent reached a new record minimum.

Compared to the average extent (1979–2000), the ice had diminished by 49%.The crystalline basement rocks of around the Arctic were recrystallized or formed during the Ellesmerian orogeny, the regional phase of the larger Caledonian orogeny in the Paleozoic Era.

Regional subsidence in the Jurassic and Triassic periods led to significant sediment deposition, creating many of the reservoirs for current day and deposits.

The rifting apart of the supercontinent Pangea, beginning in the Triassic period, opened the early Atlantic .

Rifting then extended northward, opening the Arctic as mafic oceanic crust material erupted out of a branch of Mid-Atlantic Ridge.

The Amerasia Basin may have opened first, with the Chukchi Borderland moved along to the northeast by transform faults.

Additional spreading helped to create the “triple-junction” of the Alpha-Mendeleev Ridge in the Late Cretaceous epoch.

Throughout the Cenozoic Era, the subduction of the Pacific plate, the collision of with Eurasia, and the continued opening of the North Atlantic created new hydrocarbon traps.

The seafloor began spreading from the Gakkel Ridge in the Paleocene Epoch and the Eocene Epoch, causing the Lomonosov Ridge to move farther from and subside.

Because of ice and remote conditions, the of the Arctic is still poorly explored.

The Arctic Coring Expedition drilling shed some light on the Lomonosov Ridge, which appears to be continental crust separated from the Barents-Kara Shelf in the Paleocene and then starved of sediment.

It may contain up to 10 billion barrels of .

The Gakkel Ridge rift is also poorly understand and may extend into the Laptev .

In large parts of the Arctic , the top layer (about 50 m [160 ft]) is of lower salinity and lower than the rest.

It remains relatively stable because the salinity effect on density is bigger than the effect.

It is fed by the freshwater input of the big Siberian and (Ob, Yenisei, Lena, Mackenzie), the of which quasi floats on the saltier, denser, deeper .

Between this lower salinity layer and the bulk of the lies the so-called halocline, in which both salinity and rise with increasing depth.

Last Updated on 3 years by pinc