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Oceans 11 Oceans 11

Oceans 11. Oceans: inspire and challenge… Hurricane Juan

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Page 1: Oceans 11. Oceans: inspire and challenge… Hurricane Juan

Oceans Oceans 1111

Page 2: Oceans 11. Oceans: inspire and challenge… Hurricane Juan

Oceans: inspire and Oceans: inspire and challenge…challenge…

Hurricane Juan

Page 3: Oceans 11. Oceans: inspire and challenge… Hurricane Juan

Oceans provide life:Oceans provide life:

Page 4: Oceans 11. Oceans: inspire and challenge… Hurricane Juan

And take it…And take it…

Page 5: Oceans 11. Oceans: inspire and challenge… Hurricane Juan

Oceans are fun:Oceans are fun:

Page 6: Oceans 11. Oceans: inspire and challenge… Hurricane Juan

Oceans are calm…Oceans are calm…

Page 7: Oceans 11. Oceans: inspire and challenge… Hurricane Juan

Oceans are un-stoppableOceans are un-stoppablehttp://www.asiantsunamivideos.com/http://www.asiantsunamivideos.com/

Page 8: Oceans 11. Oceans: inspire and challenge… Hurricane Juan

• Oceanography is the science of Oceanography is the science of understanding the oceans, how they understanding the oceans, how they work, how they came into existence, work, how they came into existence, how they affect our daily lives, the how they affect our daily lives, the creatures that live in them, and how creatures that live in them, and how they may be impacted by changes they may be impacted by changes caused by human influences caused by human influences

Page 9: Oceans 11. Oceans: inspire and challenge… Hurricane Juan

OceanographyOceanographyFour disciplinesFour disciplines

1)1) Biological Biological Oceanography-Oceanography- studies marine studies marine organisms, their organisms, their interactions with interactions with environment and environment and the controls on the controls on their distributiontheir distribution Copepod

(zooplankton)

Page 10: Oceans 11. Oceans: inspire and challenge… Hurricane Juan

2) Physical 2) Physical Oceanography-Oceanography-

studies ocean studies ocean currents, waves, currents, waves, tides and water tides and water circulationcirculation

Page 11: Oceans 11. Oceans: inspire and challenge… Hurricane Juan

3) Chemical 3) Chemical Oceanography-Oceanography- studies sea water studies sea water chemistrychemistry

Page 12: Oceans 11. Oceans: inspire and challenge… Hurricane Juan

4) Geological 4) Geological Oceanography-Oceanography- studies the shape studies the shape and structure of and structure of the ocean basins the ocean basins and how they form and how they form and evolveand evolve

Page 13: Oceans 11. Oceans: inspire and challenge… Hurricane Juan

Undersea earthquakes and other disturbances cause tsunamis, or great waves. The largest recorded tsunami measured 210 feet above sea level when it reached Siberia's Kamchatka Peninsula in 1737.

Page 14: Oceans 11. Oceans: inspire and challenge… Hurricane Juan

Origin of OceanOrigin of Ocean

-Volcanic venting of volatile substance, including water vapor (out gassing)

-10 million years of continuous rainfall. Ice from comets (still going on).

- Ocean formed by 4 billion years ago, and is still growing (.01 km3 of water/yr.).

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Ninety percent of all volcanic activity occurs in the oceans

Page 16: Oceans 11. Oceans: inspire and challenge… Hurricane Juan

Life originates in the Life originates in the OceanOcean

•Earth had very dim light, keeping surface of oceans frozen to 300 m.

•Most of ocean a protected stable and liquid environment.

•First self-sustaining molecules may haveformed near hydrothermal vents.

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Page 18: Oceans 11. Oceans: inspire and challenge… Hurricane Juan
Page 19: Oceans 11. Oceans: inspire and challenge… Hurricane Juan

Answers: Answers: 1) The oceans cover 71 percent of the

Earth's surface and contain 97 percent of the Earth's water. Less than 1 percent is fresh water, and 2-3 percent is contained in glaciers and ice caps.

Page 20: Oceans 11. Oceans: inspire and challenge… Hurricane Juan

Hydrothermal Vents — Where it all Begins?Hydrothermal Vents — Where it all Begins?Currently many scientists think that life may have begun on Currently many scientists think that life may have begun on Earth in the vicinity of deep-oceanic, hydrothermal vents. This Earth in the vicinity of deep-oceanic, hydrothermal vents. This type of environment was anticipated by Charles Darwin, some type of environment was anticipated by Charles Darwin, some 150 years before, who wrote:150 years before, who wrote:'But if we could conceive in some warm little pond, 'But if we could conceive in some warm little pond, with all sorts of ammonia and phosphoric salts, with all sorts of ammonia and phosphoric salts, light, heat electricity etc, present'light, heat electricity etc, present'

2) Life originated in the ocean

First discovered in 1977, oases of life that include giant, red-plumed tubeworms live on the Pacific Ocean floor near hydrothermal vents. This is deeper than where sunlight can penetrate to provide the energy needed for photosynthesis. At the base of the food chain are bacteria that nourish themselves through a process of chemosynthesis. Drawing their energy from gases dissolved in warm or hot springs, mainly hydrogen sulfide, they are able to manufacture sugars and starches from carbon dioxide and water.                         Photo courtesy The Stephen Low Company

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3) The ocean contains 97 percent of the Earth's water.

4) Ocean:Ocean: The vast body of saline water that occupies the depressions of the earth’s surface

5) Water covers 361 million square kilometers

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Page 23: Oceans 11. Oceans: inspire and challenge… Hurricane Juan

6) Atlantic, Pacific, Arctic, and Indian (although sometimes the Antarctic Ocean or the Southern Ocean is referred to - it's the ocean south of 50° South latitude, surrounding Antarctica). Pacific is the deepest with an average depth of 2.5 miles, a little over 4 km.

Page 24: Oceans 11. Oceans: inspire and challenge… Hurricane Juan

7) Canada has the longest coastline of any country, at 56,453 miles ( 90 823 km) or around 15 percent of the world's 372,384 miles of coastlines

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8) Australia7687000 square km

(is renowned for it’s poisonous sea creatures!)

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Hapalochlaena lunulata Blue ringed octopusBlue ringed octopus

“Children who have been stung by the sea wasp have died within minutes of being stung”.

Box Jellyfish

“Sea wasp”

Page 27: Oceans 11. Oceans: inspire and challenge… Hurricane Juan

• 9) Although Mount Everest, at 29,028 feet, is often called the tallest mountain on Earth, Mauna Kea, an inactive volcano on the island of Hawaii, is actually taller. Only 13,796 feet of Mauna Kea stands above sea level, yet it is 33,465 feet tall if measured from the ocean floor to its summit

Page 28: Oceans 11. Oceans: inspire and challenge… Hurricane Juan

10)1,370,000,000 cubic km of ocean water

1 cubic m

1000m = 1km

1km

1km

1km

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11) The highest tides in the world are at the Bay of Fundy, which separates New Brunswick from Nova Scotia. At some times of the year the difference between high and low tide is 53 feet 6 inches, the equivalent of a three-story building

Page 30: Oceans 11. Oceans: inspire and challenge… Hurricane Juan
Page 31: Oceans 11. Oceans: inspire and challenge… Hurricane Juan

12) At the deepest point in the ocean the pressure is more than 8 tons per square inch, or the equivalent of one person trying to support 50 jumbo jets.

The Marianas Trench in the Pacific Ocean is 11,033 meters (36,201 feet) below sea level. If Mount Everest were placed inside of this trench, it would disappear

Page 32: Oceans 11. Oceans: inspire and challenge… Hurricane Juan

13) At 4 degrees Celsius, the temperature of almost all of the deep ocean is only a few degrees above freezing.

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14) If mined, all the gold suspended in the world's seawater would give each person on Earth 20kg.

Mr. T style bling!

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15) If the ocean's total salt content were dried, it would cover the continents to a depth of 1.5m.