Title: Oceanography
1Oceanography
- Montgomery Ch 7, pg 225-8
- Oceanography handout (web) and this power point
2typical groundwater flow rate 15 m per
day compared to a river velocity of 1 m s-1
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4key point fresh water is less dense than
saltfresh water floats on salt water
5Aberjona R Watershed Woburn Ma
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9Back to Woburn
- Best policy is to prevent such tragedies
10Back to Woburn
- Best policy is to prevent such tragedies
- Both industry and government failed at Woburn
11Back to Woburn
- Best policy is to prevent such tragedies
- Both industry and government failed at Woburn
- Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) 1970
charged with protecting environment and human
health
12Back to Woburn
- Best policy is to prevent such tragedies
- Both industry and government failed at Woburn
- Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) 1970
charged with protecting enviroment and human
health - Two key water-resource laws enforced by EPA
Safe Drinking Water Act establishes Maximum
Contamination Levels (MCL) of pollutants in
public drinking supplies this would have
prevented the Woburn tragedy the MCL for TCE is
0
13Back to Woburn
- Best policy is to prevent such tragedies
- Both industry and government failed at Woburn
- Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) 1970
charged with protecting enviroment and human
health - Two key water-resource laws enforced by EPA
Clean Water Act (1972) complex legislation
designed to control discharge of pollutants into
navigable waters
14Oceanography Handout on web
- Oceanography Handout
- The oceans cover 71 of the earths surface and
are home to our fisheries, and perhaps more
importantly are essential in the maintenance of
our climate. This document is a brief review of
key facets of oceanography.
15Oceanography Handout on web
- Oceanography Handout
- The oceans cover 71 of the earths surface and
are home to our fisheries, and perhaps more
importantly are essential in the maintenance of
our climate. This document is a brief review of
key facets of oceanography. - One of the most important aspects of the oceans
is that they moderate our climate through (1) the
heat required (or evolved) when water evaporates,
precipitates, freezes or melts, and -
- H2O liq H2O vap heat is absorbed when
reaction goes to the right (150 j/gm) heat is
evolved when it goes to - left
16Oceanography Handout on web
- Oceanography Handout
- The oceans cover 71 of the earths surface and
are home to our fisheries, and perhaps more
importantly are essential in the maintenance of
our climate. This document is a brief review of
key facets of oceanography. - One of the most important aspects of the oceans
is that they moderate our climate through (1) the
heat required (or evolved) when water evaporates,
precipitates, freezes or melts, and (2) ocean
currents which transport warm water to high
latitudes (see below). -
- H2O liq H2O vap heat is absorbed when
reaction goes to the right (150 j/gm)
17Key point sea level is rising at a rate of 2
mm per year (average Of last 100 years)
18East coast shorelines vulnerable to sea level rise
19Sea level rise or fall is a common Occurrence in
Earth HIstory
2020,000 years ago during The last glacial
maximum Or Ice Age
21Sea level was 130 m lower than today
22Sea level was 130 m lower than today during last
glacial maximum Sea level rose rapidly before
6000 Years ago
23 Sea level rose rapidly before 6000 Years ago
(17 mm per year between 14,000 and 8000 years
ago) 0.1 to 0.2 mm per year thereafter Until
the last 100 to 150 years When it rose at a rate
of 1 to 2 mm Per year.
24Here are raised beaches On Baffin Island,
Canadian Arctic
25Here are raised beaches On Baffin Island,
Canadian Arctic These reflect apparent Sea
level drop due to
26Here are raised beaches On Baffin Island,
Canadian Arctic These reflect apparent Sea
level drop due to Crust rebounddue to
27 These reflect apparent Sea level drop due
to Crust rebounddue To melting of the ice
sheet Following the Ice Age note contours of ice
thickness
28Sea level rise is a particularly Critical problem
for Lousiana
29In Lousiana, beach Erosion is bad not only
Because of sea level Rise but because the
30The Mississippi Delta which Additional
mass Causes the Land to sink Moreover
31Flood control Measures Have Decreased Sediment De
livery to delta
32And the delta Continues to sink
33Coastal processes processes Important from the
wetlands Behind the beach to the Edge of the
continental Shelf
34Coastal processes processes Important from the
wetlands Behind the beach to the Edge of the
continental Shelf Note the line of beach Dunes
which act as a Barrier to the ocean And protect
the land behin The dunes
35Coastal processes processes Important from the
wetlands Behind the beach to the Edge of the
continental Shelf Note the wide continental
Shelf in this cartoonwhere is This the case in
North Amer. East or west coast?
36The tectonically passive margin Of eastern North
Am. Has a wide Continental shelfbut the active
Western margin of South America Has a very
narrow shelf
37Typical beach Note Wetlands Dunes beachface
38Outer Banks of North Carolina Note expanse of
Shallow water And wetlands Behind the Barrier
island
39Wetlands are nurseries for fish and Crustaceans,
beach is a rather narrow Ephemeral structure
40 Coasts are dynamic Sand, silt, cobbles are
driven Along the coast By long shore currents
41Waves are transmitted through medium but the
water remains in placebreakers form when the sea
floor becomes shallow enough to interfere with
wave movement
42Remember Coasts are dynamic Sand, silt, cobbles
are driven Along the coast By long
shore Currents Note how the Waves hit the Beach
at an Angle this Creates the longshore current
43Rip tides, consequence of water piling up on the
beachthese are currents Not tidesswim parallel
to beach to get out of them
44Wave Energyhere Focused on a Headlandcan Breaku
p rocks Into sand grains but
45Wave erosion can have considerable effects over
short Time periods
46A characteristic landform Is a wave-cut platform
47But a critical sand supply Comes from rivers
48Sediment very much Controlled by Geology Black
Sand beach, Hawaii
49Grayton Beach, FL panhandle to the right Pure
quartz sand from Appalachian Igneous and
metamorphic rocks
50Dynamic on a yearly basis Summer beach
(top) Winter beach (bottom) At which times are
the Waves more energetic?
51Cape Cod
Growth of Cape Cods southern tip from 1884-1958
via long shore currents
52Sapelo Island Georgia Note narrow beach marshes
53Sapelo Island Georgia Note narrow
beach Marshes Sand is being transferred From
north (left) to south End of island
54Developed beaches wetlands Destroyed, commonly
filled in and Built upon
55Supply of sediment Diminished because Of dams
56Beach groins rock jetties Built
perpendicular To beach used to trap
Sediment What is the common Longshore
current Direction here?
57Beach groins rock jetties Built
perpendicular To beach used to trap
Sediment What is the common Longshore
current Direction here? Left to right
58Artificial channel with Jetties blocking
transfer Of sand across channel
59Miamis approachbrute forcetruck in
60The 60 million dollar Project makes sense
here Because of tourist dollars But not many
places elsewhere
61Major damage is associated With hurricanes
62Katrina
63In northern hemisphere Worst damage will Be to
the Northeast of the eye
64Biloxi MS which took brunt of wind
65While New Orleans was flooded
66Houses are commonly built on top of The dunes
67Lake Michigan results
68Dauphin Island AL July 2001 before Hurricane
Lilli Sept 2004, after Ivan Aug 2005,
after Katrina
69What happens of interest in the Deepoceanremember
the mean depth Of the oceans is about 4.5 kmso
the Open ocean is by far the most Important
domain in terms of volume
70Seawater compositionnote difference in residence
time and river concentration for Na compared to
HCO3- and Ca2
- Species Concentration Concentration Mean
Residence - In seawater in avg. river water time
(million years) - (mg/kg) (mg/kg)
in oceans - Chloride, Cl- 19350 5.75 120
- Sodium, Na 10760 5.15 75
- Sulfate, SO4- 2712 8.25 12
- Magnesium, Mg2 1294 3.35 14
- Calcium, Ca2 412 13.4 1.1
- Potassium, K 399 1.3 11
- Bicarbonate, HCO3- 145 52 0.10
- Bromide Br- 67 0.02 100
- Boron B3 4.6 0.01 10
- Strontium, Sr2 7.9 0.03 12
- Fluoride, F- 4.6 0.10 0.5
- Total 35150 89
- Source Schlesinger (1991) Biogeochemistry
71Seawater compositionnote difference in residence
time and river concentration for Na compared to
HCO3- and Ca2
- Species Concentration Concentration Mean
Residence - In seawater in avg. river water time
(million years) - (mg/kg) (mg/kg)
in oceans - Chloride, Cl- 19350 5.75 120
- Sodium, Na 10760 5.15 75
- Sulfate, SO4- 2712 8.25 12
- Magnesium, Mg2 1294 3.35 14
- Calcium, Ca2 412 13.4 1.1
- Potassium, K 399 1.3 11
- Bicarbonate, HCO3- 145 52 0.10
- Bromide Br- 67 0.02 100
- Boron B3 4.6 0.01 10
- Strontium, Sr2 7.9 0.03 12
- Fluoride, F- 4.6 0.10 0.5
- Total 35150 89
- Source Schlesinger (1991) Biogeochemistry
Major input is river water
72The heat associated with mid-ocean ridge
volcanism leads To creation of hot springs,
black smokers
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74Note Source of water seawater Which picks up
various Ion as it circulates through The crust
75Note Source of water seawater Which picks up
various Ion as it circulates through The crust
Volume of water volume Of oceans
circulates Through the crust every 10 million
years or so
76Note Source of water seawater Which picks up
various Ion as it circulates through The crust
Volume of water volume Of oceans
circulates Through the crust every 10 million
years or so So this is a major influence on
seawater composition as well
77Seawater compositionnote difference in residence
time and river concentration for Na compared to
HCO3- and Ca2
- Species Concentration Concentration Mean
Residence - In seawater in avg. river water time
(million years) - (mg/kg) (mg/kg)
in oceans - Chloride, Cl- 19350 5.75 120
- Sodium, Na 10760 5.15 75
- Sulfate, SO4- 2712 8.25 12
- Magnesium, Mg2 1294 3.35 14
- Calcium, Ca2 412 13.4 1.1
- Potassium, K 399 1.3 11
- Bicarbonate, HCO3- 145 52 0.10
- Bromide Br- 67 0.02 100
- Boron B3 4.6 0.01 10
- Strontium, Sr2 7.9 0.03 12
- Fluoride, F- 4.6 0.10 0.5
- Total 35150 89
- Source Schlesinger (1991) Biogeochemistry
78- Ca2 2 HCO3- CaCO3 CO2 H2O
- represents sequestration of CO2 in carbonates
79- Ca2 2 HCO3- CaCO3 CO2 H2O
- represents sequestration of CO2 in carbonates
- shells
- limestones
- corals
- etc.
80Salinityif you evaporate seawater you get
calcite then gypsum (CaSO4), then salt, then
sylvite, KCl
81Surface seawater Temperatures range From about
30oC To about 0oC Orange yellows warm Blues
cold Note various Temperature bulges
82One of the bulges Gulf Stream false color
image Orange, red warm Green, blue
cold What about density?
83Surface Currents driven by prevailing winds and
influenced by the Coriolis Effectnote direction
of movement in gyres north of equatorclockwise
or Counter clockwise?...how about south of the
equator?
84Water parcels moving north from equator have
high angular velocities (due to Earths
rotation) and bend to the right (east)just the
opposite effect when They head south to the
equatorhence the clockwise rotation of the gyres
north Of the equatordoes the same reasoning
work in the south?
85Ocean is vertically Stratified with Respect to
T, density, salinity Note T at bottom of ocean
in the Deep oceans is near Freezing
everywhere Thermocline etc. are where there are
large rapid changes in T etc. Note thin surface
zone is well mixed due to wind action
86What happens to Gulf Stream waters as they Move
north? Orange, red warm Grenn, blue
cold What about density?
87Warm Salty water becomes cold and denseand sinks
to bottom of ocean
88This is the start of The oceanic
conveyor Belta an ocean wide Current that
includes currents In the deep ocean Note warm
water Carried into N. Atlantic Make Greenland,
Iceland And northern Europe habitable
89This is the start of The oceanic
conveyor Belta an ocean wide Current that
includes currents In the deep ocean Note
vulnerability of Conveyer belt to influx
of Freshwater from Greenland ice cap
90Cross sectional view of what happens in the
Atlantic
91 Global Warming Uncertainty What happens if The
Greenland Ice Sheet melts (which It is doing)
92Relatively Cold, fresh water At surface will
not Sinkand the Conveyor belt may Shut down
93 Global Warming Uncertainty What happens if The
Greenland Ice Sheet melts (which It is
doing)Gulf Stream blocked by Cold, light,
fresh Water at the surface??