Oceanus
The Atlantic Ocean Surrounds the South Georgia Islands.
Early inhabitants of the world pictured the Earth (Europe and Asia) as a vast continent on a flat disk. The continent was surrounded by water. The Greeks named this water "okeanos", the great stream of water encircling Earth's disk.
The Greek word for ocean is "ὠκεανός" (pronounced "okeanós"). In ancient Greek mythology, Okeanos was also the personification of the ocean, often depicted as a great river encircling the Earth. The term has influenced various modern languages and is the root for words related to the ocean in English, such as "oceanography."
Oceanus
The Southern Ocean (also known as the Great Southern Ocean, Antarctic Ocean, South Polar Ocean, and Austral Ocean) comprises the southernmost waters of the World Ocean, generally taken to be south of 60°S latitude and encircling Antarctica.
The Southern Ocean (also known as the Great Southern Ocean, Antarctic Ocean, South Polar Ocean, and Austral Ocean) comprises the southernmost waters of the World Ocean, generally taken to be south of 60°S latitude and encircling Antarctica.
Oceanus was a primordial Titan in Greek mythology, often depicted as male. He represented the ocean and was considered the embodiment of the vast, encircling body of water that surrounded the earth. As a Titan, he was one of the offspring of Uranus (Sky) and Gaia (Earth), and he was typically associated with the male aspect of nature.
Oceanus was the Titan god of the great earth-encircling river Okeanos,the ocean, the font of all the earth's fresh-water: including rivers, wells, springs and rain-clouds. Okeanos was also the god who regulated the rising and setting of the heavenly bodies which were believed to emerge and descend into his watery realm at the ends of the earth.
The Southern Ocean (also known as the Great Southern Ocean, Antarctic Ocean, South Polar Ocean, and Austral Ocean) comprises the southernmost waters of the World Ocean, generally taken to be south of 60°S latitude and encircling Antarctica.
Earth Lord was created in 1988.
In ancient Greece the god of the Ocean was called Poseidon. In ancient Rome he was called Neptune.
The area encircling the Pacific Ocean is called the "Ring of Fire," because its edges mark a circle of high volcanic and seismic activity (earthquakes). Most of the active volcanoes on Earth are located on this circumference. On the periphery of the Pacific Ocean, the edge of the Pacific Continental Plate is expanding in the seabed, and is hitting the North American Plate, the Nazca Plate, the Eurasian Plate, and other plates, causing the margins of the plates to collide, buckle, and compress, causing earthquakes and volcanoes.