Title: Ocean Currents
1Ocean Currents
- http//oceanworld.tamu.edu/students/currents/index
.html - Ocean World
2What is a current?
3Ocean currents
- a steady horizontal movement of water or air in a
definite direction. - Ocean currents flow in complex patterns affected
by wind, the water's salinity and heat content,
bottom topography, and the Earth's rotation
4Topography of the ocean. Red and yellow hills
blue valleys
5Ocean currents
- Surface currents
- Upper kilometer wind driven
- Deeper Currents gravity driven
- Mixing moves very cold dense water up to the
surface. The dense water is replaced by cold
dense water that sinks to the bottom near
Greenland, Norway and Antarctica. Deeper water is
affected by long variability of climate.
6Wind
- Wind-driven currents affect about 20 of the
ocean's total volume. These are the only currents
that most people see. Sailors have charted
patterns of the ocean's currents for hundreds of
years. - The sun ultimately creates winds in the
atmosphere and ocean currents. Because the
equator receives more direct rays from the sun
throughout the year, this creates a temperature
imbalance. Unequal heating of the atmosphere on
land and the oceans creates winds and
circulation.
7Wind energy is converted to water movements
called "currents" by friction between the wind
and the water surface. The surface currents
resemble the surface winds. Once these surface
currents are set in motion they are influenced by
three other factors Coriolis effect, presence of
coasts, and horizontal pressure gradients.
8Ekman spiral The Ekman transport combined with
the Coriolis force causes each layer of water to
change angle slightly creating a spiraling affect
in the water the spiraling is clockwise in the
northern hemisphere and counter-clockwise in the
southern hemisphere
9Gyres
10Trade winds
- originally named by sailors, the trade-winds are
a group of winds which blow from the east. - The trade-winds are part of the Hadley cells
which lie between 30 degrees North and 30 degrees
South. The easterly trade-winds are the surface
component of Hadley cells which due to the
Coriolis effect move from the Northeast north of
the Equator and from the Southeast south of the
equator. - Where the two sets of winds meet along the
Equator the lack of persistent winds result in
relative calm seas, this area is known by sailors
as the doldrums. Air masses that move from
subtropical high pressure belts toward the
equator. They are northeasterly in the Northern
Hemisphere and southesterly in the Southern
Hemisphere
11Salinity
- a measure of the quantity of dissolved salts in
ocean water. - This is influenced by the geologic formations
underlying the area. - Salinity is lower in areas underlain by igneous
formations and higher in areas underlain by
sedimentary formations. - Higher salt concentrations are also more likely
in arid regions where water evaporates leaving
the same amount of salt in less water and thus
increasing the salinity.
12Density
- the average mass per unit volume a measure of
how much matter is squeezed into a given space - the more closely packed the molecules, the higher
the density of the material. - Density in the ocean is determined by salinity
and temperature
13Deep Ocean circulation
- the slow circulation of water at great depths is
driven by density differences rather than by wind
energy
14Upwelling
- a current of cold, nutrient-rich water rising to
the surface. - Upwellings are caused by strong seasonal winds
moving surface coastal water out from the coast
and leaving a space that the upwelling fills in. - Many marine plants and animals live off this
nutrient-rich water.
15Great Ocean conveyor belt
16The Global Conveyor Belt
- The global conveyor belt thermohaline circulation
is driven primarily by the formation and sinking
of deep water (from around 1500 meters to the
Antarctic bottom water overlying the bottom of
the ocean) in the Norwegian Sea. - This circulation is thought to be responsible for
the large flow of upper ocean water from the
tropical Pacific to the Indian Ocean - UNEP http//www.grida.no/climate/vital/32.htm
17Sea level changes
- Over the last 100 years, the global sea level has
risen by about 10 to 25 cm. - It is likely that much of the rise in sea level
has been related to the concurrent rise in global
temperature over the last 100 years. - On this time scale, the warming and thermal
expansion of the oceans may account for about 2-7
cm of the observed sea level rise, while the
observed retreat of glaciers and ice caps may
account for about 2-5 cm..
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