Mount Gabi

Underwater mountain off the coast of Western Australia

35°15′0″S 115°07′0″E / 35.25000°S 115.11667°E / -35.25000; 115.11667GeographyLocationSea floor, 50 km (31 mi) from Augusta, Western AustraliaMap

Mount Gabi is an underwater mountain, similar to a guyot, that was discovered in 2006, fifty kilometres (31 mi) off the coast of Augusta near the south-western tip of Western Australia.[1] It lies a similar distance west of Windy Harbour

It lies at a depth of one thousand metres (3,300 ft), rising three hundred metres (980 ft) from the sea floor and is five kilometres (3.1 mi) wide.

Mount Gabi was discovered by Cameron Buchanan, a multibeam sonar specialist from Geoscience Australia, the Australian national agency for geoscience research, via swath mapper during investigations of continental shelf processes between the Great Australian Bight and Cape Leeuwin.

References

  1. ^ Geoscience Australia (31 May 2006). "Survey detour discovers underwater mountain". Retrieved 21 October 2010.

External links

  • Geoscience Australia


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