List of seas on Earth


This is a list of seas of the World Ocean, including marginal seas, areas of water, various gulfs, bights, bays, and straits. In many cases it is a matter of tradition for a body of water to be named a sea or a bay, etc., therefore all these types are listed here. Entities called "seas" which are not divisions of the World Ocean are not included in this list, nor are ocean gyres.

Terminology

  • Ocean – the four to seven largest named bodies of water in the World Ocean, all of which have "ocean" in the name.
  • Sea has several definitions:
  • * A division of an ocean, delineated by landforms, currents, or specific latitude or longitude boundaries. This includes but is not limited to marginal seas, and this is the definition used for inclusion in this list.
  • * A marginal sea is a division of an ocean, partially enclosed by islands, archipelagos, or peninsulas, adjacent to or widely open to the open ocean at the surface, and/or bounded by submarine ridges on the sea floor.
  • * The World Ocean. For example, the Law of the Sea states that all of the World Ocean is "sea", and this is also common usage for "the sea".
  • * Any large body of water with "sea" in the name, including lakes.
  • River – a narrow strip of water that flows over land from a higher elevation to a lower one
  • Tributary – a small river that flows into a larger one
  • Estuary – the piece of a river that flows into the sea or ocean
  • Strait – a narrow area of water connecting two wider areas of water, also sometimes known as a passage
  • Channel – usually wider than a strait
  • Passage – connects waters between islands, also sometimes known as a strait
  • Canal – a human-made channel
  • Fjard – a large open water between groups of islands
There are several terms used for bulges of ocean that result from indentations of land, which overlap in definition, and which are not consistently differentiated:
  • Bay – generic term; though most features with "bay" in the name are small, some are very large
  • Gulf – a very large bay, often a top-level division of an ocean or sea
  • Fjord – a long bay with steep sides, typically formed by a glacier
  • Bight – a bay that is typically shallower than a sound
  • Sound – a large, wide bay which is typically deeper than a bight or a strait
  • Cove – a small, typically sheltered bay with a relatively narrow entrance
  • Inlet – a narrow and long bay similar to a land peninsula, but adjoining the sea
  • Polynya – least used of these terms, a patch of water surrounded by ice
Many features could be considered to be more than one of these, and all of these terms are used in place names inconsistently; especially bays, gulfs, and bights, which can be very large or very small. This list includes large areas of water no matter the term used in the name.

Largest seas by area

The largest terrestrial seas, in decreasing order of area, are:
  1. Philippine Sea
  2. Coral Sea
  3. American Mediterranean Sea
  4. Arabian Sea
  5. Sargasso Sea
  6. South China Sea
  7. Weddell Sea
  8. Caribbean Sea
  9. Mediterranean Sea
  10. Gulf of Guinea
  11. Tasman Sea
  12. Bay of Bengal
  13. Bering Sea
  14. Sea of Okhotsk
  15. Gulf of Mexico
  16. Gulf of Alaska
  17. Barents Sea
  18. Norwegian Sea
  19. East China Sea
  20. Hudson Bay
  21. Greenland Sea
  22. Somov Sea
  23. Mar de Grau
  24. Riiser-Larsen Sea
  25. Sea of Japan
  26. Argentine Sea
  27. East Siberian Sea
  28. Lazarev Sea
  29. Kara Sea
  30. Scotia Sea
  31. Labrador Sea
  32. Andaman Sea
  33. Laccadive Sea
  34. Irminger Sea
  35. Solomon Sea
  36. Mozambique Channel
  37. Cosmonauts Sea
  38. Baffin Bay
  39. Laptev Sea
  40. Arafura Sea
  41. Ross Sea
  42. Chukchi Sea
  43. Timor Sea
  44. North Sea
  45. Bellingshausen Sea
  46. Beaufort Sea
  47. Celebes Sea
  48. Banda Sea
  49. Red Sea
  50. Black Sea
  51. Gulf of Aden
  52. Yellow Sea
  53. Baltic Sea
  54. Caspian Sea
  55. Libyan Sea
  56. Mawson Sea
  57. Levantine Sea
  58. Java Sea
  59. Gulf of Thailand
  60. Celtic Sea
  61. Gulf of Carpentaria
  62. Tyrrhenian Sea
  63. Sulu Sea
  64. Cooperation Sea
  65. Persian Gulf
  66. Gulf of St. Lawrence –
  67. Bay of Biscay
  68. Aegean Sea
  69. Gulf of Anadyr
  70. Molucca Sea
  71. Oman Sea
  72. Ionian Sea
  73. Gulf of California
  74. Balearic Sea
  75. Adriatic Sea
  76. Flores Sea

    Marginal seas by ocean

Seas may be considered marginal between ocean and land, or between oceans in which case they may be treated as marginal parts of either. There is no ultimate authority on the matter.
File:Ionian Sea map.png|thumb|The Aegean, Adriatic, Ionian, and Tyrrhenian are all marginal seas within the Mediterranean Sea.
File:Arabian Sea map.png|thumb|The Arabian Sea as a marginal sea of the Indian Ocean.

Arctic Ocean

In addition to the marginal seas listed in the three subsections below, the Arctic Ocean is sometimes considered a marginal sea of the Atlantic.

Africa and Eurasia