Defining the Word “Seamount”

Reading through this issue of Oceanography, it will become apparent that researchers in different disciplines see their seamounts in quite different ways. The term seamount has been defined many times (e.g., Menard, 1964; Schmidt and Schmincke, 2002; Pitcher et al., 2007; International Hydrographic...

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Main Authors: Hubert Staudigel, Anthony A.P. Koppers, J. William Lavelle, Tony J. Pitcher, Timothy M. Shank
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Oceanography Society 2010-03-01
Series:Oceanography
Subjects:
Online Access:http://tos.org/oceanography/issues/issue_archive/issue_pdfs/23_1/23-1_staudigel6.pdf
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author Hubert Staudigel
Anthony A.P. Koppers
J. William Lavelle
Tony J. Pitcher
Timothy M. Shank
author_facet Hubert Staudigel
Anthony A.P. Koppers
J. William Lavelle
Tony J. Pitcher
Timothy M. Shank
author_sort Hubert Staudigel
collection DOAJ
description Reading through this issue of Oceanography, it will become apparent that researchers in different disciplines see their seamounts in quite different ways. The term seamount has been defined many times (e.g., Menard, 1964; Schmidt and Schmincke, 2002; Pitcher et al., 2007; International Hydrographic Organization, 2008; Clark et al., 2010; Wessel et al., 2010) but there is no “generally accepted” definition. Instead, most definitions serve the particular needs of a discipline or a specific paper. Inconsistencies are common among different publications and, most notably, differ from the recommendations of the International Hydrographic Organization and International Oceanographic Commission (International Hydrographic Organization, 2008). It is not the goal of this note to arbitrate or remedy these inconsistencies. However, as seamount research begins to coalesce into one broad, multidisciplinary research community, it is important to: (1) have a simple definition that explains which features are included under the umbrella of seamount research and which are not, providing an essential condition for defining the seamount research community, and (2) respect and be aware of differences among disciplinary definitions, as they may stand in the way of consistently applying one disciplinary data set to another.
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spelling doaj.art-7c24999411d54e539a458851742a89632022-12-21T18:24:39ZengThe Oceanography SocietyOceanography1042-82752010-03-012312021Defining the Word “Seamount”Hubert StaudigelAnthony A.P. KoppersJ. William LavelleTony J. PitcherTimothy M. ShankReading through this issue of Oceanography, it will become apparent that researchers in different disciplines see their seamounts in quite different ways. The term seamount has been defined many times (e.g., Menard, 1964; Schmidt and Schmincke, 2002; Pitcher et al., 2007; International Hydrographic Organization, 2008; Clark et al., 2010; Wessel et al., 2010) but there is no “generally accepted” definition. Instead, most definitions serve the particular needs of a discipline or a specific paper. Inconsistencies are common among different publications and, most notably, differ from the recommendations of the International Hydrographic Organization and International Oceanographic Commission (International Hydrographic Organization, 2008). It is not the goal of this note to arbitrate or remedy these inconsistencies. However, as seamount research begins to coalesce into one broad, multidisciplinary research community, it is important to: (1) have a simple definition that explains which features are included under the umbrella of seamount research and which are not, providing an essential condition for defining the seamount research community, and (2) respect and be aware of differences among disciplinary definitions, as they may stand in the way of consistently applying one disciplinary data set to another.http://tos.org/oceanography/issues/issue_archive/issue_pdfs/23_1/23-1_staudigel6.pdfseamountseamount definition
spellingShingle Hubert Staudigel
Anthony A.P. Koppers
J. William Lavelle
Tony J. Pitcher
Timothy M. Shank
Defining the Word “Seamount”
Oceanography
seamount
seamount definition
title Defining the Word “Seamount”
title_full Defining the Word “Seamount”
title_fullStr Defining the Word “Seamount”
title_full_unstemmed Defining the Word “Seamount”
title_short Defining the Word “Seamount”
title_sort defining the word seamount
topic seamount
seamount definition
url http://tos.org/oceanography/issues/issue_archive/issue_pdfs/23_1/23-1_staudigel6.pdf
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