Rosemary Bank
Rosemary Bank is a seamount approximately 120 kilometres west of Scotland, located in the Rockall Trough, in the northeast Atlantic. It was discovered in 1930 by the survey vessel HMS Rosemary, from which it takes its name. It is one of only three seamounts known in Scottish waters.
Rosemary Bank hosts a range of important habitats including deep sea sponge aggregations and cold water coral. Many species of fish, including orange roughy, blue ling, leafscale gulper shark and Portuguese dogfish are also found here. In 2014 the bank was declared a Nature Conservation Marine Protected Area. The designation covers, and is in place to protect the sponge aggregations, and the cenozoic marine geomorphology of the seabed.
The feature originated about 70 million years ago, as a result of volcanic activity. Rosemary Bank rises to approximately 1000 metres above the sea floor, its highest point being 400 metres below sea-level. Around its base lies a thin "moat", where the sea-bottom is up 300 m lower than the surrounding terrain. The lowest parts of the MPA are approximately 2300 metres below sea-level.