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Oceans and Coastlines

Oceans and Coastlines. Ocean Basins Oceans are all connected, so it’s really just 1 big ocean! 5 ocean basins –Atlantic –Pacific –Indian –Antarctic (Southern)

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Page 1: Oceans and Coastlines. Ocean Basins Oceans are all connected, so it’s really just 1 big ocean! 5 ocean basins –Atlantic –Pacific –Indian –Antarctic (Southern)

Oceans and Coastlines

Page 2: Oceans and Coastlines. Ocean Basins Oceans are all connected, so it’s really just 1 big ocean! 5 ocean basins –Atlantic –Pacific –Indian –Antarctic (Southern)

Ocean Basins• Oceans are all connected, so it’s really just

1 big ocean!

• 5 ocean basins– Atlantic– Pacific– Indian– Antarctic (Southern)– Arctic (northern extension of the Atlantic)

Page 3: Oceans and Coastlines. Ocean Basins Oceans are all connected, so it’s really just 1 big ocean! 5 ocean basins –Atlantic –Pacific –Indian –Antarctic (Southern)
Page 4: Oceans and Coastlines. Ocean Basins Oceans are all connected, so it’s really just 1 big ocean! 5 ocean basins –Atlantic –Pacific –Indian –Antarctic (Southern)

Fig. 15.7a, p.380

Page 5: Oceans and Coastlines. Ocean Basins Oceans are all connected, so it’s really just 1 big ocean! 5 ocean basins –Atlantic –Pacific –Indian –Antarctic (Southern)

Seawater Composition and Salinity– The salt content or salinity is around 3.5%– The dissolved material in sea water comes from

• Weathering of rock and transport to sea by rivers

• Volcanic activity

– Evaporation and freezing tend to concentrate salt in sea water

– Salt is removed by biological organisms– Sea water also receives an influx of fresh water

• from precipitation and river flow

Page 6: Oceans and Coastlines. Ocean Basins Oceans are all connected, so it’s really just 1 big ocean! 5 ocean basins –Atlantic –Pacific –Indian –Antarctic (Southern)

3 Major Density Zones in the Ocean (controlled by temperature and salinity)

Page 7: Oceans and Coastlines. Ocean Basins Oceans are all connected, so it’s really just 1 big ocean! 5 ocean basins –Atlantic –Pacific –Indian –Antarctic (Southern)

Current: continuous flow of water in a given direction

• Surface currents: caused by winds

• Winds blow in preferred directions due to differential heating of the earth’s surface

• Example of a surface current: Gulf Stream – 80km wide by 650m deep, 5km velocity (at fastest)

Page 8: Oceans and Coastlines. Ocean Basins Oceans are all connected, so it’s really just 1 big ocean! 5 ocean basins –Atlantic –Pacific –Indian –Antarctic (Southern)

Gyres - circuit of currents around the periphery of an ocean basin

• Gulf Stream Current is part of the North Atlantic Gyre)

• Caused by Westerlies and trade winds

• Trade winds blow from the northeast in the or southeast in the tropics

• Westerly winds (westerlies) blow from the northwest or southwest in the mid-latitudes

Page 9: Oceans and Coastlines. Ocean Basins Oceans are all connected, so it’s really just 1 big ocean! 5 ocean basins –Atlantic –Pacific –Indian –Antarctic (Southern)

Gyres

Page 10: Oceans and Coastlines. Ocean Basins Oceans are all connected, so it’s really just 1 big ocean! 5 ocean basins –Atlantic –Pacific –Indian –Antarctic (Southern)

Gyres

• Gyres circulate clockwise in the northern hemisphere

• Gyres circulate counterclockwise in the southern hemisphere

Page 11: Oceans and Coastlines. Ocean Basins Oceans are all connected, so it’s really just 1 big ocean! 5 ocean basins –Atlantic –Pacific –Indian –Antarctic (Southern)

Surface Ocean Currents

• Currents on the west side of the ocean basin (i.e. east side of continent) originate in the tropics and are warm-water currents

• Examples: Gulfstream, Brazil Current• Currents on the east side of the ocean basin

(i.e. west side of continent) originate at the poles and are cold-water currents

• Examples: California Current, Humbolt Current (cause of El Nino)

Page 12: Oceans and Coastlines. Ocean Basins Oceans are all connected, so it’s really just 1 big ocean! 5 ocean basins –Atlantic –Pacific –Indian –Antarctic (Southern)

Surface Ocean Currents

Page 13: Oceans and Coastlines. Ocean Basins Oceans are all connected, so it’s really just 1 big ocean! 5 ocean basins –Atlantic –Pacific –Indian –Antarctic (Southern)

The diagram shows the South Pacific during a normal year.• Strong S. Pacific Equatorial Current reinforces the northward-flowing

Humbolt Current• This promotes upwelling of cold, nutrient-rich water, which supports the

S. American fishing industry

Page 14: Oceans and Coastlines. Ocean Basins Oceans are all connected, so it’s really just 1 big ocean! 5 ocean basins –Atlantic –Pacific –Indian –Antarctic (Southern)

An El Nino Event (ENSO)– Occurs every 3-7 years for a year– Weakens trade winds and S. Pacific Equatorial current– This in turn weakens the Humbolt Curent which reduces cold upwelling– This creates warmer surface water, depresses the fishing industry and

changes weather patterns in many places.

Page 15: Oceans and Coastlines. Ocean Basins Oceans are all connected, so it’s really just 1 big ocean! 5 ocean basins –Atlantic –Pacific –Indian –Antarctic (Southern)

Consequences of El Nino

Anomalous warm water off the coast of South America

• Increased storm activity in many parts of the U.S and northwestern Europe

• Drought in Australia and S.E. Asia

Page 16: Oceans and Coastlines. Ocean Basins Oceans are all connected, so it’s really just 1 big ocean! 5 ocean basins –Atlantic –Pacific –Indian –Antarctic (Southern)

Deep-Ocean Currents- Thermohaline Circulation

– caused by density differentials– Temperature: cold water is more dense than

warm and will sink– Salinity: saltier water is denser than fresh water

and will sink

– Deep-ocean currents are connected to the surface current system

– Increased freshening of polar waters is changing thermohaline circulation patterns. What is the effect on surface currents?

Page 17: Oceans and Coastlines. Ocean Basins Oceans are all connected, so it’s really just 1 big ocean! 5 ocean basins –Atlantic –Pacific –Indian –Antarctic (Southern)

If the Labrador Current (Cold) is too fresh to sink, it may block passage of the N. Atlantic Drift (warm) which moderates the climate of Great Britain and

Scandinavia

Page 18: Oceans and Coastlines. Ocean Basins Oceans are all connected, so it’s really just 1 big ocean! 5 ocean basins –Atlantic –Pacific –Indian –Antarctic (Southern)

Global warming and sea-level rise

• Sea-level has risen and fallen in the past– Past 40,000 yrs, 150m fluctuation– More recently, sea-level is rising ~3mm/yr– Warming temperatures raise sea level by

• Thermal expansion of water• Release of glacial water that was on land

– Some low lying coasts and islands are already feeling effects

Page 19: Oceans and Coastlines. Ocean Basins Oceans are all connected, so it’s really just 1 big ocean! 5 ocean basins –Atlantic –Pacific –Indian –Antarctic (Southern)

Fig. 16-39, p.401

Page 20: Oceans and Coastlines. Ocean Basins Oceans are all connected, so it’s really just 1 big ocean! 5 ocean basins –Atlantic –Pacific –Indian –Antarctic (Southern)

Rising Sea Level

Page 21: Oceans and Coastlines. Ocean Basins Oceans are all connected, so it’s really just 1 big ocean! 5 ocean basins –Atlantic –Pacific –Indian –Antarctic (Southern)

Fig. 16.38a, p.423

Page 22: Oceans and Coastlines. Ocean Basins Oceans are all connected, so it’s really just 1 big ocean! 5 ocean basins –Atlantic –Pacific –Indian –Antarctic (Southern)

Tides

• Both the Earth and the Moon revolve around a point located in the interior of the earth, near point A.

• The solid Earth is not affected, but the water forms 2 permanent bulges.

Page 23: Oceans and Coastlines. Ocean Basins Oceans are all connected, so it’s really just 1 big ocean! 5 ocean basins –Atlantic –Pacific –Indian –Antarctic (Southern)

Tides

• Bulge “A” caused directly by gravitational attraction of moon.

• Bulge “B” caused by inertia of water as earth swings inward toward the moon (“centrifugal force”).

Page 24: Oceans and Coastlines. Ocean Basins Oceans are all connected, so it’s really just 1 big ocean! 5 ocean basins –Atlantic –Pacific –Indian –Antarctic (Southern)

Tides

• As the earth rotates, shorelines pass through each bulge approximately 12 hours apart.

• Other influences include:– Gravitational effect of the Sun– Shape of the coastline

Page 25: Oceans and Coastlines. Ocean Basins Oceans are all connected, so it’s really just 1 big ocean! 5 ocean basins –Atlantic –Pacific –Indian –Antarctic (Southern)

Spring and Neap Tides

• Spring tide – highest tides, occur when Earth, Sun & Moon are in alignment

• Neap tide – lower high tide, when Earth, Sun & Moon form a 90o angle

Page 26: Oceans and Coastlines. Ocean Basins Oceans are all connected, so it’s really just 1 big ocean! 5 ocean basins –Atlantic –Pacific –Indian –Antarctic (Southern)

Spring and Neap Tide

Page 27: Oceans and Coastlines. Ocean Basins Oceans are all connected, so it’s really just 1 big ocean! 5 ocean basins –Atlantic –Pacific –Indian –Antarctic (Southern)

Beach Drifting and Longshore Currents

Page 28: Oceans and Coastlines. Ocean Basins Oceans are all connected, so it’s really just 1 big ocean! 5 ocean basins –Atlantic –Pacific –Indian –Antarctic (Southern)

Fig. 16-22, p.390