Satellite data reveal nearly 20,000 previously unknown deep-sea mountains

The find roughly doubles the number of known seamounts in Earth’s oceans

An elevation image of Kelvin Seamount, in a rainbow of color with purple at the bottom and red at the top, on a black background.

Ship-mounted sonar reveals how Kelvin Seamount, off the coast of Massachusetts, rises from the seafloor (purple and blue denote low elevation while red is high). A new mapping technique based on satellite data has found thousands of previously unknown undersea mountains.

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

The number of known mountains in Earth’s oceans has roughly doubled.