Why the CARIBBEAN Ocean Floor Is So Strange
Failed to add items
Add to basket failed.
Add to wishlist failed.
Remove from wishlist failed.
Adding to library failed
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
-
Narrated by:
-
By:
About this listen
Drift slowly beneath the Caribbean Sea and settle into a seafloor that feels quietly unfamiliar. In this Nature Documentary For Sleep, we explore the strange, layered geology of the Caribbean ocean floor, from deep basins and submarine ridges to hidden escarpments shaped by ancient movement below the water.
With soft narration and calm underwater imagery, this video traces how volcanic arcs, sediment blankets, and trench like valleys create a mosaic of textures in the deep ocean. Let the stillness guide you downward into dark blue silence, where the Caribbean’s underwater landscapes reveal their gentle, alien beauty.
📚 Chapters:
0:00:00 Drifting Down Into a Basin That Shouldn’t Be Here
0:13:43 The First Strange Edge: Terraces, Fault Scarps, and Quiet Cliffs
0:27:27 Midpoint Commitment: Entering the Inner Basin Where Water Behaves Differently
0:41:10 Soft Sediment, Hard Truth: Carbonate Snow and the Patchwork Seafloor
0:54:54 Ridge of Basalt and Serpentine: The Seafloor’s Hidden Skeleton
1:08:38 The Sill and the Slow Spill: Where Basins Exchange Their Deep Water
1:22:21 Aftermath on the Abyssal Plain: A Strange Floor That Stays Unfinished