We present results from a 2300 arcmin^2 survey of the Orion A molecular cloud
at 450 and 850 micron using the Submillimetre Common-User Bolometer Array
(SCUBA) on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope. The region mapped lies directly
south of the OMC1 cloud core and includes OMC4, OMC5, HH1/2, HH34, and L1641N.
We identify 71 independent clumps in the 850 micron map and compute size, flux,
and degree of central concentration in each. Comparison with isothermal,
pressure-confined, self-gravitating Bonnor-Ebert spheres implies that the
clumps have internal temperatures T_d ~ 22 +/- K and surface pressures log
(k^-1 P cm^-3 K) = 6.0 +/- 0.2. The clump masses span the range 0.3 - 22 Msun
assuming a dust temperature T_d ~ 20 K and a dust emissivity kappa_850 = 0.02
cm^2 g^-1. The distribution of clump masses is well characterized by a
power-law N(M) propto M^-alpha with alpha = 2.0 +/- 0.5 for M > 3.0 Msun,
indicating a clump mass function steeper than the stellar Initial Mass
Function. Significant incompleteness makes determination of the slope at lower
masses difficult. A comparison of the submillimeter emission map with an H_2
2.122 micron survey of the same region is performed. Several new Class 0
sources are revealed and a correlation is found between both the column density
and degree of concentration of the submillimeter sources and the likelihood of
coincident H_2 shock emission.Comment: 44 pages, 17 figures, accepted by Ap