A report on AntarcticaSouthern Ocean and Ross Sea

The Antarctic Ocean, as delineated by the draft 4th edition of the International Hydrographic Organization's Limits of Oceans and Seas (2002)
Sea ice in the Ross Sea
Antarctica, a composite satellite image
A general delineation of the Antarctic Convergence, sometimes used by scientists as the demarcation of the Southern Ocean
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A speculative representation of Antarctica labelled as 'Terra Australis Incognito' on Jan Janssonius's Zeekaart van het Zuidpoolgebied (1657), Het Scheepvaartmuseum
The International Hydrographic Organization's delineation of the "Southern Ocean" has moved steadily southwards since the original 1928 edition of its Limits of Oceans and Seas.
Bloom in the Ross Sea, January 2011
Eastern Antarctica is to the right of the Transantarctic Mountains and Western Antarctica is to the left.
"Southern Ocean" as alternative to the Aethiopian Ocean, 18th century
Vinson Massif from the northwest, the highest peak in Antarctica
1928 delineation
Glossopteris sp. leaf from the Permian of Antarctica
1937 delineation
The Antarctic Plate
Area inside the black line indicates the area constituting the Pacific Ocean prior to 2002; darker blue areas are its informal current borders following the recreation of the Southern Ocean and the reinclusion of marginal seas
Pine Island Glacier, photographed in November 2011
Continents and islands of the Southern Ocean
Ice mass loss since 2002
A map of Australia's official interpretation of the names and limits of oceans and seas around Australia
Image of the largest hole in the ozone layer recorded, in September 2006
1564 Typus Orbis Terrarum, a map by Abraham Ortelius showed the imagined link between the proposed continent of Antarctica and South America.
Emperor penguins with juveniles
Portrait of Edmund Halley by Godfrey Kneller (before 1721)
Orange lichen (Caloplaca) growing on the Yalour Islands, Wilhelm Archipelago
"Terres Australes" (sic) label without any charted landmass
Refuse littering the shoreline at Bellingshausen Station on King George Island, photographed in 1992
James Weddell's second expedition in 1823, depicting the brig and the cutter Beaufroy
A whale in the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary
Famous official portrait of Captain James Cook who proved that waters encompassed the southern latitudes of the globe. "He holds his own chart of the Southern Ocean on the table and his right hand points to the east coast of Australia on it."
Adélie Land, depicted by Jules Dumont d'Urville in his Voyage au Pôle Sud (1846)
Admiral von Bellingshausen
The Nimrod Expedition of 1907–1909 (left to right): Frank Wild, Ernest Shackleton, Eric Marshall and Jameson Adams
USS Vincennes at Disappointment Bay, Antarctica in early 1840.
The "ceremonial" South Pole, at Amundsen–Scott Station
1911 South Polar Regions exploration map
The U.S. delegate Herman Phleger signs the Antarctic Treaty in December 1959.
Frank Hurley, As time wore on it became more and more evident that the ship was doomed ( trapped in pack ice), National Library of Australia.
The cruise ship Silver Cloud in Wilhelmina Bay
MS Explorer in Antarctica in January 1999. She sank on 23 November 2007 after hitting an iceberg.
An aerial view of McMurdo Station, the largest research station in Antarctica
Seas that are parts of the Southern Ocean
An Antarctic meteorite, Allan Hills 84001 on display at the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History
Manganese nodule
The Nimrod Expedition of 1907–1909 (left to right): Frank Wild, Ernest Shackleton, Eric Marshall and Jameson Adams
An iceberg being pushed out of a shipping lane by (L to R) USS Burton Island (AGB-1), USS Atka (AGB-3), and USS Glacier (AGB-4) near McMurdo Station, Antarctica, 1965
The Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) is the strongest current system in the world oceans, linking the Atlantic, Indian and Pacific basins.
Location of the Southern Ocean gyres.
Regional Working Group zones for SOOS
Orca (Orcinus orca) hunting a Weddell seal in the Southern Ocean
A wandering albatross (Diomedea exulans) on South Georgia
Fish of the Notothenioidei suborder, such as this young icefish, are mostly restricted to the Antarctic and Subantarctic
Weddell seals (Leptonychotes weddellii) are the most southerly of Antarctic mammals.
Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba) are a keystone species of the food web.
A female warty squid (Moroteuthis ingens)
An adult and sub-adult Minke whale are dragged aboard the Japanese whaling vessel
Severe cracks in an ice pier in use for four seasons at McMurdo Station slowed cargo operations in 1983 and proved a safety hazard.

The Southern Ocean, also known as the Antarctic Ocean, comprises the southernmost waters of the World Ocean, generally taken to be south of 60° S latitude and encircling Antarctica.

- Southern Ocean

The Ross Sea is a deep bay of the Southern Ocean in Antarctica, between Victoria Land and Marie Byrd Land and within the Ross Embayment, and is the southernmost sea on Earth.

- Ross Sea

Situated almost entirely south of the Antarctic Circle and surrounded by the Southern Ocean, it contains the geographic South Pole.

- Antarctica

Antarctica is divided into West Antarctica and East Antarctica by the Transantarctic Mountains, which stretch from Victoria Land to the Ross Sea.

- Antarctica

Explorer James Clark Ross passed through what is now known as the Ross Sea and discovered Ross Island (both of which were named for him) in 1841.

- Southern Ocean

3 related topics with Alpha

Overall

Colossal squid

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Part of the family Cranchiidae.

Part of the family Cranchiidae.

Size comparison with a human
The beak of a colossal squid
This specimen, caught in early 2007, is the largest cephalopod ever recorded. Here it is shown alive during capture, with the delicate red skin still intact and the mantle characteristically inflated.
The specimen on display at the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa

It is known to inhabit the circumantarctic Southern Ocean.

The squid's known range extends thousands of kilometres north of Antarctica to southern South America, southern South Africa, and the southern tip of New Zealand, making it primarily an inhabitant of the entire circumantarctic Southern Ocean.

Colossal squid are also sighted often near Cooperation Sea and less near Ross Sea because of its predator and competitor, the Antarctic toothfish.

Emperor penguin

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Adults with chicks
Mounted skeleton at the American Museum of Natural History
Emperor penguin jumping out of the water in Antarctica
Halley Bay Colony in 1999
An emperor penguin colony on Snow Hill Island
Emperor penguin attacked by a leopard seal
Giant petrel and emperor penguin chicks
The life-cycle of the emperor penguin
The egg of the emperor penguin. It is 13.5 × 9.5 cm and vaguely pear-shaped. Muséum de Toulouse
Emperor penguin feeding a chick
Two Adélie penguins and an emperor penguin at SeaWorld San Diego

The emperor penguin (Aptenodytes forsteri) is the tallest and heaviest of all living penguin species and is endemic to Antarctica.

The Cape Crozier colony on the Ross Sea shrank drastically between the first visits by the Discovery Expedition in 1902–03 and the later visits by the Terra Nova Expedition in 1910–11; it was reduced to a few hundred birds, and may have come close to extinction due to changes in the position of the ice shelf.

The emperor penguin searches for prey in the open water of the Southern Ocean, in either ice-free areas of open water or tidal cracks in pack ice.

Logo of the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources

Convention for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources

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Part of the Antarctic Treaty System.

Part of the Antarctic Treaty System.

Logo of the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources

The goal is to preserve marine life and environmental integrity in and near Antarctica.

It was established in large part to concerns that an increase in krill catches in the Southern Ocean could have a serious impact on populations of other marine life which are dependent upon krill for food.

In 2010, a proposal for an MPA in the Ross Sea were put forward by both the US and New Zealand.