Coach Williams Room 310B. Physical Oceanography.

27
Earth Science Coach Williams Room 310B

Transcript of Coach Williams Room 310B. Physical Oceanography.

Earth ScienceCoach Williams

Room 310B

Physical Oceanography

Chapter 15

Objectives:◦ Identify methods used by scientists to study

Earth’s oceans◦ Discuss the origin and composition of the oceans◦ Describe the distribution of oceans and major

seas

Section 15.1: The Oceans

The study of Earth’s oceans

Oceanography

Sonar: SOund NAvigation and Ranging” Mapping ocean floors Side-scan sonar: angles Satellites: monitor water temp/ waves

Modern Oceanography

Earth: 4.6 billion years old◦ Ocean sedimentary rock ◦ Igneous rock- lava chilled quickly = water

Where did ocean water come from?◦ Meteorites colliding release water◦ 0.05% of meteorites are water◦ Volcanism: water vapor

Origins of Oceans

Oceans: 97% of Earth’s water Freshwater/glaciers: 3% Sea Level: level of the ocean

◦ Ice makes sea levels vary◦ Sea floor rising/falling

71% of planet is covered by oceans Major Oceans: Pacific, Atlantic, Indian Other oceans: Arctic & Antarctic Seas: smaller than oceans and usually land-

locked

Distribution of Earth’s Water

Oceans

Objectives:◦ Compare/contrast the physical and chemical

properties of seawater◦ Explain ocean layering◦ Describe the formation of deep-water masses

Section 15.2: Seawater

96.5% water & 3.5% dissolved salt (NaCl) Salt is metal & group17 on periodic table Salinity: amount of dissolved salt

◦ Average: 35ppt (parts per thousand)◦ Lower: polar regions, river/ocean, high

precipitation◦ Higher: low precipitation/high evaporation

Salt: Volcanism, weathering/rivers Dissolved gasses: O, N, CO2

Salt balance: precipitate, ocean spray, animals

Chemical Properties of Seawater

Density: more dense than pure water >1◦ Salinity, temperature

Freezing point lowered (-2°C) Darkness: ocean water absorbs light (100m)

Physical Properties of Seawater

Range of surface temp.: -2°C through 30°C (Avg=15°C)

Depth & temp.: deeper = colder Temp. Profile: plots temp. with depth 3 Layers (based on temp./density)

◦ Surface layer◦ Thermocline: rapidly decreasing temp.◦ Bottom layer

Ocean Layering

Ocean Layering

Warm tropic water rises Polar waters sink 3 Ocean Masses:

◦ Antarctic Bottom Water◦ North Atlantic Deep Water◦ Antarctic Intermediate Water

Water Masses

Water Masses

Objectives:◦ Describe the physical properties of waves◦ Explain how tides form◦ Compare/contrast various ocean currents

Section 15.3: Ocean Movements

Wave: movement that carries energy Caused by wind Water moves up and down; energy moves

forward

Waves

Crest: tallest part Trough: lowest part Wavelength: distance between wave Wave base: how deep water is disturbed

◦ ½ of wavelength Speed of wave affected by wavelength

◦ Speed = wavelength x frequency Wave height: distance from crest to trough

Wind speed Wind duration Fetch: how much open water

Wave Characteristics

Wave Characteristics

Breakers: collapsing waves Friction with bottom slows water down Faster waves catch slower moving water Faster water at top Shapes shoreline

Breaking Waves

Periodic rise/fall of sea level◦ High Tide: highest level◦ Low Tide: lowest level

Tidal range: difference between two levels

Tides

Gravitational pull: Earth, Moon, Sun Gravity depends on mass and distance

◦ Sun: larger mass (Solar Tides)◦ Moon: closer (Lunar Tides)

Spring tides: Sun/Moon/Earth aligned◦ Tides are higher/lower than normal

Causes of Tides

Causes of Tides

Density currents: ◦ Caused by density differences (salinity/temp.)◦ Slow moving

Surface currents:◦ Wind driven currents◦ Top 100m◦ Faster◦ Predictable patterns

Gyres: circular current systems

Ocean Currents

Ocean Currents

Movement of water up and down Brings nutrients from deep

Upwelling