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Puerto Rico Trench

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

The deep-sea submersible Limiting Factor floating on the ocean surface after a historic dive to the Puerto Rico Trench.

The Puerto Rico Trench is a very deep part of the ocean between the Atlantic Ocean and the Caribbean Sea. It is just north of the island of Puerto Rico and is the deepest spot in the whole Atlantic Ocean. This trench forms where large pieces of Earth’s surface, called tectonic plates, meet and move against each other.

The area around the Puerto Rico Trench is where the Lesser Antilles begin and where the South American plate meets the Caribbean plate. It is also close to where the North American plate moves alongside the Caribbean plate. These moving plates create faults and trenches, shaping the ocean floor.

Location map Puerto Rico Trench—United States Geological Survey

Scientists have studied this area and found that earthquakes near the trench could cause big waves called tsunamis. In the past, Puerto Rico experienced a harmful tsunami that caused damage. Understanding the Puerto Rico Trench helps scientists prepare for such natural events in the future.

Description

The Puerto Rico Trench is the deepest part of the Atlantic Ocean. It stretches for 810 kilometres (503 miles) and reaches depths between 8,376 metres (27,480 feet) and 8,740 metres (28,675 feet). The deepest spot is often called the Milwaukee Deep. In 2018, a special underwater vehicle named DSSV Pressure Drop helped find this spot using special sound waves. Later, another vehicle called DSV Limiting Factor went down to check the depth.

Geology

The trench is where two large pieces of Earth’s crust, called plates, move past each other. The Caribbean plate moves eastward compared to the North American plate. At the trench, the North American plate moves slowly beneath the Caribbean plate.

To the southeast, the South American plate moves beneath the Caribbean plate in a different area called the Lesser Antilles subduction zone, which causes volcanoes in that part of the Caribbean Sea.

Some nearby islands like the Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, Hispaniola, Cuba, and Jamaica were once part of a volcanic area, but they no longer have active volcanoes. These islands can still face strong earthquakes and tsunamis. The Puerto Rico Trench has caused very powerful earthquakes in the past and could do so again. Scientists have found that a special mass under the trench affects gravity and can make navigation tools less accurate.

Public awareness

Many people who live near the Puerto Rico Trench do not know about the risks of earthquakes and tsunamis. Since 1988, groups in Puerto Rico have tried to teach people about these dangers using local media.

After a big wave in 2004 affected many countries around the Indian Ocean, more people became worried about what could happen in the Caribbean. Local leaders have started planning for emergencies. In Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, the United States government has been looking into these risks and is working on systems to give warnings about big waves.

Seismicity

On October 11, 1918, a strong earthquake hit the western coast of Puerto Rico and caused a wave that flooded the area. This happened because of an old fault near the Mona Passage. In 1953, another quake affected Santo Domingo in the Dominican Republic. Experts worry because the main fault under the Puerto Rico Trench has not moved in over 200 years. They think it might be ready for a big earthquake soon.

Tectonic and seismic map of Puerto Rico Trench area. Arrows show direction of plate movements. USGS.

Puerto Rico often feels smaller tremors. For example, a tremor in 1981 was felt all over the island, and another in 1985 was felt in Cayey and Salinas.

The earthquake that happened on January 13, 2014, north of Puerto Rico, happened because of movements in the earth’s layers. Scientists think it moved either a shallow structure or a nearly upright one. At that spot, the North America plate moves slowly to the west-southwest compared to the Caribbean plate, and goes under it at the Puerto Rico Trench.

LocationYearM
Puerto Rico Trench
8.1
Anegada Trough
7.5
Mona Canyon
7.5
Mona Canyon
7.5
Dominican Republic
8.1
Dominican Republic
1953
6.9
Puerto Rico Trench
2014
6.4
Puerto Rico Trench
2019
6.0

Exploration

Scientists have made several trips to study the Puerto Rico Trench. They used special equipment on ships to map the ocean floor. In 1964, a French underwater vehicle named Archimède visited the trench for the first time. In 2012, a robotic vehicle went down too. They found many tiny creatures called amphipods living there, along with a soft dark animal that looked like a sea cucumber and a small crustacean.

The submersible Limiting Factor floating on the surface of the Atlantic Ocean after the six hour dive to the Bottom of the Puerto Rico Trench.

American explorer Victor Vescovo went to the deepest part of the trench on December 19, 2018. He reached a depth of 8,376 meters using a special underwater vehicle called DSV Limiting Factor. This made him the first person to reach the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean. A support ship helped survey the area, and the information will help with mapping the world’s ocean floors.

Images

A map showing the deep sea floor of the Atlantic and Caribbean Oceans, including the deepest part called the Puerto Rico Trench.
A stunning view of planet Earth from space.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Puerto Rico Trench, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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