mariana trench
convergent boundaries are easy to find most of them are found in the ocean. One Famous convergent plate boundary would be the Sunda Double Trench. It is found in the Indian ocean and it reaches a depth of 24,440 feet. It is the deepest trench in the Indian Ocean.
2004 Indian Ocean Earthquake and Tsunami
Ocean trenches form at areas of subduction.
Atlantic Ocean is the most famous ocean in the world.
convergent boundaries are easy to find most of them are found in the ocean. One Famous convergent plate boundary would be the Sunda Double Trench. It is found in the Indian ocean and it reaches a depth of 24,440 feet. It is the deepest trench in the Indian Ocean.
Trenches are most likely to occur at convergent plate boundaries, where tectonic plates collide and one is forced beneath the other in a process called subduction. This creates deep oceanic trenches, such as the Mariana Trench in the western Pacific Ocean, which is the deepest known trench on Earth.
Most trenches are found in the Pacific Ocean basin. This is because the Pacific Plate is the largest tectonic plate on Earth and is actively subducting beneath other plates, leading to the formation of deep ocean trenches. The Mariana Trench, the deepest trench in the world, is located in the Pacific Ocean.
Either, Oceanic trench or Submerine canyon.
The answer to your question, concerning the deepest trench in the Atlantic Ocean, is that of the Puerto Rico Trench. It is actually found upon the boundary between the Caribbean Sea and the Atlantic Ocean. This trench has been measured at a maximum depth of 28,232 ft; a depth of little over five miles! I hope that this answers your question.
You don't record oceans, you see the oceans from space or know the oceans are there or swim in the oceans (although you wouldn't want to swim in the Arctic Ocean), and that is not recording. The Pacific and Atlantic Ocean both travel from one end of the world to the other, so they're both equally long. this answer is not available sorry try later
Second battle of the Marne
convergent boundary -rift valley divergent boundary -mid-ocean ridge