Bering Denizi'ndeki adalar
- The Aleutian Trench (or Aleutian Trough) is an oceanic trench along a convergent plate boundary which runs along the southern coastline of Alaska and the Aleutian islands.
- The Aleutian Trench reaches a maximum depth of 26,604 feet (8,109 metres) at about 51° N, 178° W. The average slopes of its northern.
- The Aleutian Trench, extending 2,900 kilometers from the Gulf of Alaska to Kamchatka, marks the place where the Pacific plate is being subducted beneath the...
- The trench runs from the southeast coast of Alaska to the Kamchatka Peninsula in Russia. Volcanic Islands along Aleutian Trench.
- The Aleutian Trench, which has formed along the convergent boundary and has been produced by the subduction of the oceanic plate, extends for 2,000 miles.
- The tectonic character of the eastern Aleutian Trench and some major events in its geologic history can be estimated from nine continuous seismic reflection...
- The Aleutian Trench is a convergent plate boundary. The trench forms part of the boundary between two tectonic plates.
- (2019) have speculated that the Aleutian trench may have exploited a pre-existing transform boundary in a possible backarc behind the Olutorsky arc.
- At its north-eastern end the Kuril-Kamchatka Trench merges into the Aleutian Trench and where they meet, the Kamchatka Strait (191 km wide and 4420 m deep)...
- Identifier. dr_a-part-of-the-eastern-aleutian-trench-6353014.