A 'marginal sea' is a part of
ocean partially enclosed by
land such as
islands,
archipelagos, or
peninsulas. Unlike
mediterranean seas, marginal seas have
ocean currents caused by ocean winds.
Many marginal seas are enclosed by
island arcs that were formed from the
subduction of one
oceanic plate beneath another.
Marginal seas of the
Pacific Ocean:
★ The
Bering Sea (separated by the
Aleutian Islands)
★ The
Chukchi Sea (separated by
Wrangel Island and the
Bering Strait)
★ The
Sea of Japan (by the
Japanese Archipelago)
★ The
Sea of Okhotsk (by the
Kurile Islands)
★ The
South China Sea (by the
Philippines)
★ The
East China Sea (by the
Ryukyu Islands)
★ The
Yellow Sea (by the
Korean Peninsula)
★ The
Philippine Sea (by the
Ogasawara Islands, the
Mariana Islands, and
Palau)
★ The
Coral Sea (by the
Solomon Islands and
Vanuatu)
★ The
Tasman Sea (by
New Zealand)
Marginal seas of the
Atlantic Ocean:
★ The
North Sea (separated by
Great Britain)
★ The
Irish Sea (by
Ireland)
★ The
Norwegian Sea (by
Iceland, the
Faroe Islands and
Shetland)
★ The
Scotia Sea (by the
Falkland Islands,
South Georgia, and the
South Sandwich Islands)
A marginal sea of the
Indian Ocean:
★ The
Andaman Sea (separated by the
Andaman and
Nicobar Islands)
★ The
Java Sea (separated by the
Greater Sunda Islands)
A marginal sea of the
Arctic Ocean:
★ The
Laptev Sea (separated by the
Severnaya Zemlya and the
New Siberian Islands)
Seas barely marginal include the
Tasman Sea.
Note that although the
Caribbean Sea is enclosed by most of the
Antilles and the mainland of the Americas, it is not a marginal sea because (together with the
Gulf of Mexico) it forms the American mediterranean sea and its currents are mainly caused by salinity and temperature differences rather than by ocean winds.
See also
★
Mediterranean sea
★
Sea
★
Ocean