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Water Land ForcesKey Terms

A wall like structure that

sticks out into the ocean

C1 $100

What is a Jetty?

C1? $100

A stream of water that flows like a river through the

ocean.

C1 $200

What is a current?

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The area where the ocean and

land interact.

C1 $300

What is the shore?

C1 $300

A measure of the amount of

salt in the water.

C1 $400

What is the salinity?

C1 $400

Timer

The final Jeopardy answer is:C1 final

Why are waves usually bigger in the ocean than in a small

lake?

C1 finalThe size of a wave depends on the area of the water and the

strength of the wind. The wind may blow the same strength over

the lake as the ocean, but the ocean has a larger surface. So,

the wind blows over a longer distance as it moves over the

ocean, producing larger waves.

C2 $100The part of the ocean floor that drops steeply.

C2 $100

What is the continental

slope?

C2 $200

The large flat area on the

bottom of the ocean.

C2 $200

What is the abyssal plain?

C2 $300

A point of land formed when soft rock wears away.

C2 $300

What is a headland?

C2 $400

A temporary pool of ocean water.

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What is a tide pool?

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How does a jetty work?

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A jetty traps sand carried by long shore currents.

C3 $100

What causes waves to form.

C3 $100

What happens when wind blows over the surface

of the water?

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How does water in a wave move?

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In a circle

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What happens to water pressure and water temperature as you descend?

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Pressure increases,

temperature decreases

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The type of currents that cause sand to

move.

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What are long shore currents?

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Why might some beach property owners oppose the building of

jetties?

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People on one side of the jetty would benefit while the people on the other side would have the sand eroded away with no

way of it being replaced.

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A dangerous current that can pull a swimmer away from shore.

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What is a rip current?

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This forms when waves wear a hole in a headland.

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What is a sea arch?

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Beach restorations replace this.

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What is sand?

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Where do estuaries happen?

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Where a river empties into an

ocean.

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If you were at the shore during a hurricane and the winds were strong and gusty, what kinds of waves would you observe?

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The strong, gusty winds would cause waves to surge stronger

and higher than normal waves. The waves would be

choppy and capped with white.

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Time when you can see more of the shoreline.

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What is low tide?

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Storm surges are caused by these.

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What are hurricanes ?

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The two major currents in the northern hemisphere.

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What is the gulf stream

and Kuroshio?

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What features might you find on the abyssal plain?

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Volcanoes

Trenches

mountains?

C5 $500

Rainwater flows along the side of the street, carrying leaves and twigs and depositing them where the flow turns the corner. Which makes the flow slow down. Is this a good model for long shore currents that carry beach material? Explain?

C5 $500

YES, long shore currents drop their sediments at a place where the current slows, just as the flow of rainwater deposits leaves where it turns the corner.

(Your welcome)

This Jeopardy template was created by Dr. Robert Pettis, Director

An Adventure of the American Mind, University of South Carolina Spartanburg

This Jeopardy game was created by

(Mr. J)

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