Water and Seawater

44
Water and Seawate r Chapter 3

description

Chapter 3. Water and Seawater. Water Molecules. Water has three states. GAS. WATER. ICE. Ice Floats. Water carries heat energy. Water is a powerful solvent. Seawater. Oceans pick up dissolved solids from a variety of sources. Seawater sampling. A Niskin Bottle in action. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Water and Seawater

Page 1: Water and Seawater

Water and Seawater

Chapter 3

Page 2: Water and Seawater

Water Molecules

Page 3: Water and Seawater

Water has three states

ICE

GAS

WATER

Page 4: Water and Seawater

Ice Floats

Page 5: Water and Seawater

Water carries heat energy

Page 6: Water and Seawater

Water is a powerful solvent.

Page 7: Water and Seawater

Seawater

Page 8: Water and Seawater

Oceans pick up dissolved solids from a variety of sources

Page 9: Water and Seawater

A Niskin Bottle in action

Seawater sampling

Page 10: Water and Seawater
Page 11: Water and Seawater

Red Sea

Elevated Salinity

Page 12: Water and Seawater

Atlantic Ocean at mouth of Amazon River

Baltic Sea

Low Salinities

Page 13: Water and Seawater

Temperature, Salinity and Density

Page 14: Water and Seawater

String of water bottles

Page 15: Water and Seawater

A rosette of sampling bottles and other instruments

Page 16: Water and Seawater

Water Column profile for temperature

Page 17: Water and Seawater

19th Century Oceanography

Chart from HMS Challenger Expedition

Page 18: Water and Seawater

Satellite Imagery

Ocean surface temperatures – easier than taking millions of Niskin samples (assuming you have satellite).

Page 19: Water and Seawater

Seawater and Dissolved Gases

Page 20: Water and Seawater

Oxygen

Carbon dioxide

Nitrogen

Page 21: Water and Seawater

Pressure and water depth

Page 22: Water and Seawater
Page 23: Water and Seawater

Density and Ocean Layering

Page 24: Water and Seawater

Water Column Profiles

Page 25: Water and Seawater

Temperature profiles vary with latitude

Page 26: Water and Seawater

Thermohaline Circulation

Page 27: Water and Seawater

Three-layered ocean

Page 28: Water and Seawater

Solar energy generate movement of air masses

Page 29: Water and Seawater

Hadley Cells

Page 30: Water and Seawater

Prevailing winds

Page 31: Water and Seawater

Major oceanic surface currents

Page 32: Water and Seawater

Thermohaline Circulation

Page 33: Water and Seawater

Wave Structure

Page 34: Water and Seawater

Wave structure

Page 35: Water and Seawater

Tides

Page 36: Water and Seawater

Tides

Grunion (Leuresthes tenuis)

Page 37: Water and Seawater

Tides

Two forces pull at the water

Page 38: Water and Seawater

Tides

Page 39: Water and Seawater

Tides

The Earth rotates through the bulges generated by centrifugal and gravitational forces

Page 40: Water and Seawater
Page 41: Water and Seawater

Tides Semidiurnal

Page 42: Water and Seawater

Mixed SemidiurnalTides

Page 43: Water and Seawater

DiurnalTides

Page 44: Water and Seawater

Tides