dc.description.abstract |
The Indian Ocean is bounded by Iran, Pakistan, India, and Bangladesh to the north; the Malay
Peninsula, the Sunda Islands of Indonesia, and Australia to the east; Antarctica to the south; and Africa
and the Arabian Peninsula to the west. Island nations are located in the Indian Ocean, such as Comoros,
Madagascar, Maldives, Mauritius, Seychelles, and Sri Lanka. Likewise, it is home to hundreds of
islands. It has an area of about 73,440,000 square km. The Indian Ocean’s average depth is 3,960
metres, and its deepest point, in the Sunda Deep of the Java Trench off the southern coast of the island
of Java (Indonesia), is 7,450 metres. During the long span of time, since the Late Jurassic period
(152myr) to present., the formation, evolution and present configuration of the Indian ocean obtained its
inheritable characteristics, such as oceanic ridges and fracture zones, seamounts, ocean basins, trenches
and continental rise, slope, and shelf. Besides, several well-defined coastal morphological features are
found in the Indian Ocean: estuaries, deltas, salt marshes, mangrove swamps, cliffs, coral reefs, and
complexes of barrier islands, lagoons, beaches, and coastal dunes which are highly significance for ecoand geo-tourism. With the development and evolution of these phenomena in the Indian Ocean, the
island of Sri Lanka moves from Late Jurassic period to its present position. During the Upper Jurassic
Period Sri Lanka was positioned within 65o
S-67o
S and 32oE-36oE in the Indian Ocean, and with the Sri
Lanka detached from the southern supercontinent Gondwanaland, the Indian Ocean began to open up. |
en_US |