The name, recognized by the Advisory Committee on Underwater Features (ACUF) since June 1987, is named after the British polar explorer Ernest Shackleton (1874–1922).
Natural delimitation between the Pacific and South Atlantic oceans
The researchers Juan Ignacio Ipinza Mayor and Cedomir Marangunic Damianovic put forward the scientific theory that the separation of the Pacific and Atlantic Ocean oceans "could be confirmed from the so-called Shackleton Fracture Zone (...) the boundary is then located east of the so-called Cape Horn Meridian".[4]
In 2019, the scientific journal Geology is News published "The SFZ separates tectonic plates and oceans, to the east the Scotia plate
and to the west the Antarctic plate (which includes the former Phoenix plate), and to the east the Pacific Ocean and to the west the Atlantic Ocean."[2]
In 2004 The Geological Society of America in the scientific paper entitled Shackleton Fracture Zone: No barrier to early circumpolar ocean circulation posits that: "the Shackleton Fracture Zone could have blocked the gateway until the early Miocene. Geophysical and geochemical evidence presented here suggests that the Shackleton Fracture Zone is an oceanic transverse ridge".[1]