Sea of Marmara Attractions
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Marmara region
11,500sq.km/4440sq.mile inland sea between Thrace and Asia Minor
The Sea of Marmara separates European Turkey from Asia Minor. In antiquity it was known as Propontis. 280km/173mi long and 80km/50mi wide, it extends from the Bosphorus to the Dardanelles and links the Black Sea with the Aegean Sea. Tectonic movement in the Early Quaternary period created a rift valley with large parts of the old land surface ending up only 200m/650ft under water. The deepest water is to be found in an underwater trough which extends 1,300m/4,250ft below the surface and which follows the line of a broken shelf into the Gulf of Izmit (Izmit Körfezi). This rift valley is part of the long North Anatolian fault line, which is responsible for making the Sea of Marmara and northern Anatolia an area where earthquakes are frequent.
11,500sq.km/4440sq.mile inland sea between Thrace and Asia Minor
The Sea of Marmara separates European Turkey from Asia Minor. In antiquity it was known as Propontis. 280km/173mi long and 80km/50mi wide, it extends from the Bosphorus to the Dardanelles and links the Black Sea with the Aegean Sea. Tectonic movement in the Early Quaternary period created a rift valley with large parts of the old land surface ending up only 200m/650ft under water. The deepest water is to be found in an underwater trough which extends 1,300m/4,250ft below the surface and which follows the line of a broken shelf into the Gulf of Izmit (Izmit Körfezi). This rift valley is part of the long North Anatolian fault line, which is responsible for making the Sea of Marmara and northern Anatolia an area where earthquakes are frequent.
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