There’s a new ocean now—can you name all 5?

There’s a new ocean now—can you name all 5?

Unveiling a new chapter in our planet's geographical narrative, we now have a fifth ocean to explore. Can you name them all? Dive into the depths of this intriguing revelation and test your geographical prowess.

The Gerlache Strait lies off the west coast of the Antarctic Peninsula, in the large band of ocean around Antarctica that has been reclassified as the Southern Ocean by National Geographic cartographers.

Since National Geographic began making maps in 1915, it has recognized four oceans: the Atlantic, Pacific, Indian, and Arctic Oceans

Mapping the world as it is

Since the late 1970s, the National Geographic Society has employed a geographer who oversees changes and tweaks to every map that’s published

An ocean defined by its current

The Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) flows from west to east around Antarctica, in a broad fluctuating band roughly centered around a latitude of 60 degrees south-the line that is now defined as the northern boundary of the Southern Ocean.

An environment like no other

The Southern Ocean “encompasses unique and fragile marine ecosystems that are home to wonderful marine life such as whales, penguins, and seals,” notes National Geographic Explorer in Residence Enric Sala. Thousands of species live there and nowhere else.

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