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OCEAN CIRCULATION

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As the world turns. Atlantic Ocean surface currents Fig. 7.16 p 222 Look again at Box 7.3 p 233 Salt lenses Subsurface equivalent to rings and eddies Studied ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: OCEAN CIRCULATION


1
OCEAN CIRCULATION
  • As the world turns.

2
Ocean currents
  • Three kinds
  • 1. surface currents - are driven primarily by
    winds Fig 7.6 P 211 (drawing)

3
Ocean currents cont.
  • Three kinds
  • 2. subsurface currents - Fig 7.27 p 239 are
    driven by the sinking of chilled waters from the
    polar oceans that spread out through all the
    oceans and eventually return to the surface to be
    warmed (account for the mixing of the ocean
    waters) temperature-salinity (thermohaline)
    differences

4
Ocean currents cont.
  • Three kinds
  • 3. boundary currents - follow parallel to the
    continental margins
  • East-west currents in open ocean
  • North-south currents are results of deflection
    by land
  • Mapped from observations averaged over last
    century
  • Driven primarily by prevailing winds so they
    resemble those surface winds - average
    atmospheric circulation (Remember Fig. 6.10)

5
Ocean currents cont.
  • Nearly closed current patterns in ocean basins -
  • subtropical gyres - centered in the subtropical
  • region north and south of the equator and polar
  • gyres best developed in the Atlantic waters
  • between Greenland and Europe and in the
  • Weddell sea off Antarctica
  • Monsoons in Indian Ocean cause seasonally
  • variable currents Fig 7.18 p 226
  • (remember monsoons from last time)

6
  • A body in motion tends to remain in motion unless
    acted upon by another force.
  • Think continents and ocean waters.

7
CORIOLIS EFFECT
  • Quick review
  • What held for the atmosphere, holds for currents
    in the oceans.
  • At the north pole
  • rocket goes straight up
  • then comes straight down one hour later
  • Rockets speed to east or west is what ever the
    land was doing at the time of launch

8
CORIOLIS EFFECT cont
  • Rocket from pole shoot for 30 degrees N (Canary
    Islands)
  • Earth rotates 1400 Km/hr at Canary Islands
  • The Rocket lands 1400 Km west of Islands one hour
    later

9
CORIOLIS EFFECT cont
  • Rocket starts at the Equator
  • Equator is moving faster than the Canary Islands
    at 1600 Km/hr
  • The rocket lands 200 Km east of Canary Islands

10
Ekman spiral Fig 7.7 P 211
  • Caused by steady wind blowing across water
    surface, therefore wind driven
  • Currents diminish in strength and rotate to right
    with increasing depth because of Coriolis effect
  • USE (L) INDEX FINGER TO INDICATE WIND
    DIRECTIONAND CUPPED HAND TO INDICATE EARTH
    ROTATION

11
Ekman spiral cont.
  • Because of Coriolis effect, the surface current
    moves in a direction 45 to the right of the wind
    in the Northern Hemisphere and left in Southern
    Hemisphere

12
Ekman transport
  • is perpendicular to wind direction SA 54 WIND
    DRIVEN
  • direction and speed of flow change with
  • depth
  • surface waters converge in center of basins
  • waters are transported away from equator and land
    in certain areas, causing up welling

13
  • Take out time to carefully read the section
  • on ocean gyres Table 7.1 p 209

14
Geostrophic currents
  • currents where water flow due to gravity is
    balanced by deflection of Coriolis effect
    (difficult concept) Fig 7.8 P 214, SA 55
  • 1. Remember Ekamn transport always turns water
    currents to the right in Northern Hemisphere, and
    this clock wise rotation tends to produce a
    convergence of water in the middle of the gyre.

15
Geostrophic currents cont.
  • 2. Water piles up in the center of the gyres -
    can be gt 1 meter above the water level at the
    margins of the gyres T 85
  • 3. As Ekman transport continually pushes water
    into the hill, gravity also acts to counter this
    effect moving water down the surface of the slope
    Fig 7.8 p 214. Coriolis effect deflects the
    water flowing down the slope to the R in Northern
    Hemisphere

16
Geostrophic currents cont.
Using the subsurface water-density distribution
to describe the extent of the depression of the
deeper water, oceanographers are able to
calculate the elevation and slope of the sea
surface and so calculate the velocity, volume
transport, and depth of the currents present in
the geostrophic flow around the mound. T 85
17
Geostrophic currents cont.
  • 4. Sargasso Sea is the classic example of gyre
    in geostrophic balance (home work print off a
    page showing the location of the Sargasso Sea and
    its biota for next time)
  • 5. Ocean surface topography caused by winds
    (Ekman transport) mapped using data on
    temperature and salinity remember what a
    topographic map is.
  • 6. Ocean current model SA 55

18
geostrophic flow
  • refers to cyclonic fluid motions that are
  • maintained as a result of a near balance
  • between a gravity-induced horizontal
  • pressure gradient and the Coriolis effect

19
BOUNDARY CURRENTS
  • more changeable than the major
  • currents Fig 7.5 p209 currents
  • Table 7.2 p 215

20
Western boundary currents
  • strongest in oceans well developed in the
    Northern Hemisphere
  • Gulf Stream in the Atlantic - Kuroshio in the
    Pacific
  • Gulf Stream - 20o C salinity around 36o
  • Deep, narrow, swift - can not come up on
    continental shelf (western intensification)
  • Intensified by Earth's rotation (clock wise)

21
Western boundary currents cont.
  • Often meander and spin off rings that move
    separately (we will see these later)
  • Separated from adjacent slower-moving waters are
    oceanic fronts, which are marked by changes in
    water color, temperature, and salinity

22
Eastern boundary currents
  • weaker than western boundary currents
  • Broad, shallow, slow-moving - can readily flow
    over continental margins
  • Often associated with up welling areas
  • Arctic Ocean currents Fig 9.6 p 232
  • Ocean currents follow the same hydraulics as
    rivers wide - slow narrow - fast

23
  • WESTERN INTENSIFICATION OF CURRENTS

24
  • Four processes acting together intensify western
    boundary currents Fig 7.8 a p 214
  • SA 55
  • 1. earth's rotation which displaces gyres toward
    the west, compressing them against the
    continents, thus surface slopes are steeper on
    the western side of basins (think about steep
    banks along rivers)
  • 2. trade winds which blow generally westward
    along the equator, thus piling up the surface
    waters on the western sides of basins

25
  • Four processes acting together intensify western
    boundary currents
  • 3. strong westerlies force surface waters in the
    midlatitudes to flow toward the equator as they
    move across the basin
  • 4. current and apparent spin due to earth's
    rotation are in the same direction giving
    currents a higher velocity - Coriolis effect

26
WIND INDUCED CIRCULATION
  • Up welling and down welling Fig 7.12 p. 218 T
    87 SA 61 Caused by Ekman processes Fig 7.6, 7.7
    in the book
  • Up welling occurs when surface waters move away
    from the coast exposing subsurface waters The
    equator is a divergence zone which is caused by
    the winds and by the changes in the sign of the
    Coriolis effect
  • Down welling occurs where waters are moved on
    shore and causes currents to move parallel to the
    coast Fig 7.11 p 217 (book)

27
GOOGLE
  • Type rings and meanders animations in search
    line. Then go to the animation, and WALLA!! Many
    good things and pictures about ocean circulation.
    I am impressed.

28
Rings and meanders
  • Fig. 7.17 p 233 SA 58
  • Pronounced meanders of western boundary currents
  • Break off to form isolated rings that move with
    surrounding waters
  • Best known associated with Gulf Stream
  • cold core rings occur in Sargasso Sea warm core
    rings occur in slope waters
  • Eddies are equivalent to atmospheric storms - are
    weaker than rings

29
Langmuir circulation
30
Langmuir circulation
  • Near-surface phenomenon SA 59
  • Caused by strong winds - water rotates at a very
    low rate
  • Causes small-scale up welling and down welling
    forms straight rows parallel to the direction of
    the wind trapping plants etc. in zones of
    convergence between the cells (can be 100 m in
    length) - little plant material at zones of
    divergence (you can see these on Lake Michigan)

31
Thermohaline circulation
  • (temperature salinity) circulation - currents
    controlled by density
  • Dense water masses form in high latitudes
  • Water return to surface throughout the ocean and
    in up welling regions
  • Studied by geostrophic calculations and tracer
    techniques
  • Oriented generally north-south basins
  • Current patterns in Atlantic are simpler than in
    Pacific

32
Convergence/divergence circulation
  • Fig 7.5 p 209 SA 60
  • Water return to surface throughout the ocean
    and in up welling regions (divergence)
  • Water circulates downward (convergence)

33
Pacific Ocean surface currents
  • Fig 7.19 p 228 (book)
  • Fig 7 a p 206

34
Atlantic Ocean surface currents
  • Fig. 7.16 p 222
  • Look again at Box 7.3 p 233

35
Salt lenses
  • Subsurface equivalent to rings and eddies
  • Studied by acoustic tomography
  • Seen in geostrophic circulation (drawing)
  • Fig 7.8 p 214

36
Density Structure
  • Fig 7.26 p 238 SA 96

37
Water column
  • stable - dense below
  • unstable - dense above (water tips over)
  • We talked about this in the chapter on water.

38
Depth changes
  • pycnocline Fig 5.23 p 156
  • density increases rapidly with depth
  • thermocline
  • rapid temperature change with depth (this can be
    several meters thick)
  • thermohaline
  • change in temperature and salinity with depth

39
Depth changes
  • Halocline Fig 5.22 p 154
  • large changes in salinity with depth (read to
    class)
  • (temperature salinity) circulation - currents
    controlled by density relationships
  • Dense water masses form in high latitudes
  • (convergence) Fig 5.22 p 154
  • change in temperature and salinity with depth

40
Putting it all together
  • SA 97

41
  • Put in picture of thermalcline and helocline

42
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43
Surface Layer Temperatures
  • see what wind does SA 98
  • Go to google, type in thermocline changes
  • seasons click on images
  • summer - no strong winds
  • fall and spring - wind mixing and shallow
    thermocline
  • winter increasing winds - large mixed layer, no
    shallow thermocline

44
Comparing Fig 8.7
  • Atlantic Ocean SA 100
  • salinity/temperature profiles
  • Pacific Ocean SA 101
  • salinity/temperature profiles

45
Anatomy of the Atlantic Ocean
  • SA 99

46
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