Title: Ocean Waves,
1Ocean Waves, Currents, and Tides
2What is salinity? What is the most abundant
salt in the ocean?
The amount of dissolved solids in a liquid.
Sodium Chloride
3How do we study the ocean?
satellites and sonar ROVs and Submersables
4Tides
5Tides are...
- Daily changes in the level of ocean water
- Typically, coastal areas have low tides and high
tides
Photo from http//home.hiwaay.net/krcool/Astro/m
oon/moontides/
6Tides are created by the interaction between the
earth, sun and moon
Photo fromhttp//www.physicalgeography.net/fundam
entals/8r.html
7- The moons relationship to tides was observed,
but could not be explained until Sir Isaac Newton
introduced gravity
The Earth spins on its axis and revolves around
the sun. (EarthSun) The moon revolves around the
earth. Which has a greater effect on the
tides-Sun or Moon? Why?
Photo from http//www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/hi
story/PictDisplay/Newton.html
8- Tides are caused primarily by the gravity between
Earth and the moon - They move forward and backward (toward and away
from shore)
Diagram from http//csep10.phys.utk.edu/astr161/l
ect/time/tides.html
9Diagram from http//www.sfgate.com/getoutside/199
6/jun/tides.html
10Spring tide a tide of increased range that
occurs when sun and moon both impact Earth in the
same direction
Photo from http//www.physicalgeography.net/funda
mentals/8r.html
11http//aspire.cosmic-ray.org/labs/tides/menu_tide.
swf
Neap tides a tide of minimum range that occurs
when the sun and moon work in opposition
Photo from http//www.physicalgeography.net/funda
mentals/8r.html
12Waves!
13- Waves get their energy from WIND
- FETCH the open-water area offshore over
which waves can be generated by winds - The Greater the Fetch the larger the waves can
become
14RED and YELLOW Largest wave heights Lowest
waves where winds fetch is limited by
land Are lowest waves near the equator or the
poles??
Waves
15 In deep water, wave action decreases with
depth In shallow water, wave action does not
decrease with depth Crest- highest point of a
wave/Trough- lowest point of a wave Wavelength-
measured from crest to crest or trough to
trough Height- measured from crest to trough
16Why do waves increase their height as they reach
the shore?As waves interact with the ocean floor
they slow down and build up
As waves interact with the ocean floor they slow
down and build up
17Currents
18Types of Currents
Currents
Current A large stream of moving water flowing
through the ocean
- A. Surface Currents
- Caused by winds
- B. Deep Currents
- Causes by density
19What affects the density of water in the ocean?
20Currents and Temperature
- Temperature affects currents
- Equator- Warm-water currents start here (Feeds
surface currents) - Poles- Cold-water currents start here
- (Feeds the deep current- the great ocean
conveyor)
21Coriolis Effect
- The Earths rotation causes wind and surface
currents to move in curved paths instead of
straight lines - Ex. Merry-go-Round- If you roll a ball across a
spinning Merry-go-Round the ball will curve
before it reaches the other side
22Northern hemisphere
Clockwise
Southern Hemisphere
Counterclockwise
23(No Transcript)
24Currents and Temperature
- Currents affect temperature
- Sunlight reaches to a depth of about 100 meters
but warms the water down to about 300 meters.
Why? - Surface currents mix the warmer water with the
cooler water below
25Deep Currents
- Stream like movement of ocean water far below the
surface - Deep currents are caused by increasing water
density
Density the amount of matter in a given space
26Unusual Currents
El Nino El Nino, an abnormal warming of surface
ocean waters
Normally, strong trade winds blow from the east
along the equator, pushing warm water into the
Pacific Ocean. The thermocline layer of water is
the area of transition between the warmer surface
waters and the colder water of the bottom.
An El Nino condition results from weakened trade
winds in the western Pacific Ocean near
Indonesia, allowing piled-up warm water to flow
toward South America.
27Upwelling The movement of cold nutrient rich,
deep ocean water to replace warm water at the
surface. The diagram below shows how upwelling
occurs along the coast of Peru. Because of the
frictional stresses that exist between ocean
layers, surface water is transported at a 90
degree angle to the left of the winds in the
southern hemisphere, 90 degrees to the right of
the winds in the northern hemisphere. This is why
winds blowing northward parallel to the coastline
of Peru "drag" surface water westward away from
shore.