Physical Oceanography - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Physical Oceanography

Description:

Physical Oceanography Why is the ocean ... Pacific Atlantic Indian Arctic ... gathering information about the oceans. _____ maps ocean floor topography ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:212
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 28
Provided by: ScottS283
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Physical Oceanography


1
Physical Oceanography
2
Why is the ocean important?
  • The ocean covers most of Earths surface.
  • It is an important source of food and mineral
    resources.
  • We use it for transportation and recreation.
  • The ocean stores heatwater has high specific
    heat, so it takes a lot of energy to heat it up.
    Water holds on to this heat energy and stays
    warmer longer than the air.
  • The stored heat in the ocean drives much of
    Earths weather and causes climate near the ocean
    to be milder than climate in the interior of
    continents.
  • Ocean currents distribute energy (heat) and
    resources.

3
Major Oceans
  • The five major oceans are
    1._______-largest,
    deepest, coldest, least salty. 2.__________-
    second largest, shallow, warm, salty.
    3.
    _________- intermediate in depth, temperature,
    and salinity.
  • The _______Ocean near the north pole, and the
    ____________ Ocean near the south pole contain
    vast expanses of sea ice.

Pacific
Atlantic
Indian
Arctic
Southern
4
What gases are dissolved in the ocean?
  • Ocean water has many different gases dissolved in
    it, mostly nitrogen, oxygen, and carbon dioxide.
  • The movement of wind over the ocean and waves
    agitates (mixes up) the water at the surface,
    speeding up the exchange of gases between the
    ocean and the atmosphere (like shaking a soda
    bottle!).
  • Marine (ocean) plants need carbon dioxide
    dissolved in the water to go through
    photosynthesis?photosynthesis releases oxygen
    into the water, which is then used by ocean
    organisms (like fish) to go through respiration.
  • As atmospheric levels of gases rise, so do levels
    of those gases dissolved in ocean water.

5
Methods of Studying the Ocean
The Topex/Poseidon _____________ orbits 1331 km
above the Earth, gathering information about the
oceans.
satellite
Sonar
_____________ maps ocean floor topography by
timing how long it takes sound waves to bounce
off the ocean floor.
submersibles
Underwater vessels called _________________
investigate the deepest ocean trenches.
6
Sonar (also called echo-sounding)
  • Sound waves travel how fast in seawater?
  • How deep is the water if it takes ten seconds for
    the sound wave to go from ship to ocean floor and
    back to ship?

1,454 m/s
7,270 m
Calculation (10 s times 1,454 m/s divided by 2 )
7
submersible
  • The picture below is of a _____________.

8
Salinity
The amount of salt per unit water is known as
salinity.
NaCl
The most abundant salt in seawater is ________,
but there are many other salts present in the
form of ions.
The average salinity of seawater is _____ ppt.
Therefore, for every 1,000 ml water, there are
___ grams of dissolved salts.
35
35
Near the equator salinity is __________ than
average due to ___________________.
lower
greater precipitation
lower
Near the poles salinity is __________ than
average due to _______________.
melting sea ice
higher
In the Mediterranean the salinity is
__________than average due to __________.
evaporation
9
Where does the salt come from?
  • The ocean is salty due to dissolved chemicals
    eroded form the earths crust and washed into the
    sea. Solid and gaseous ejections from volcanoes,
    suspended particles swept to the ocean from the
    land by onshore winds, and materials dissolved
    from sediments deposited on the ocean floor.
  • Main reason surface water washes over rock
    containing salts such as sodium chloride (common
    table salt)
  • Also Volcanoes

10
  • The salinity here would likely be
  • 35 ppt
  • 34 ppt
  • 36 ppt

11
Colorful Seawater
  • What makes the ocean water in the picture to the
    left different colors?
  • Why would a shrimp that appears bright red at the
    surface appear black at greater depths, and why
    might this be beneficial?

differences in depth
Longer (red) wavelengths are absorbed before
reaching deep water. Shrimp can hide and not
become a meal.
12
Label the three ocean temperature layers in the
diagram below.
Surface layer
Thermocline
Deep layer
13
How does wind affect the ocean?
  • Wind causes waves
  • A wave is an up-and-down motion along the surface
    of a body of water.
  • Moving air drags across the waters surface and
    gives energy to the water, causing waves.
  • Wind blows over the ocean, causing surface
    currents.
  • carry warm water away from the equator cold
    water away from the poles
  • Earths rotation makes them spin in circles
    (clockwise in N. Hemisphere, counterclockwise in
    S. Hemisphere)
  • Ocean current mass of moving water many
    currents in the ocean distribute heat and
    nutrients
  • Currents move water, waves move energy.

14
What are deep ocean currents?
  • Deep currents are caused by differences in
    density (due to temp, salinity, etc)
  • Downwelling water moving from the surface DOWN
    to the bottom
  • carries oxygen down
  • allows animals to live in the deep ocean
  • Upwelling water moving UP to the surface
  • Occurs when warm surface water is blown offshore
    by wind. This allows the cold water at the bottom
    of the ocean to rise.
  • carries nutrients up
  • large numbers of animals gather in areas where
    upwelling occurs because of the availability of
    nutrients.

15
Upwelling
  • Water that rises to the surface as a result of
    upwelling is typically colder and is rich in
    nutrients. These nutrients fertilize surface
    waters, meaning that these surface waters often
    have high biological productivity.  Therefore,
    good fishing grounds typically are found where
    upwelling is common.

16
Ocean Floor
  • Continental shelf starts at the shore and
    slopes into the ocean
  • Continental slope where the slope starts to get
    deeper
  • Abyssal plain huge, dark flat region that
    encompasses most of the ocean floor / covered
    with mud and remains of marine life
  • Mid-ocean ridge underwater mountain range
    separated by rift valley (where new oceanic crust
    is made, hydrothermal vents discovered here)
  • Ocean trench large, V-shaped valley

17
(No Transcript)
18
Seafloor Topography
C
B
Match the following terms to their correct letter
in the diagram
E
Island Continental shelf Continental
slope Abyssal plain Seamount Continental
rise Trench Guyot
C.
F
B.
E.
D
A.
G
F.
G.
A
H.
A
D.
H
19
Chapter Review
  1. What is the average salinity of seawater?
  2. What is the deepest area of the seafloor?
  3. What is the largest ocean?
  4. Why is the ocean blue?
  5. What is the force responsible for surface
    currents?
  6. What causes density currents?
  7. Name the ocean that borders North Carolina.

35 ppt
trench
Pacific
shorter wavelengths not absorbed
wind
differences in temperature and salinity
Atlantic
20
Ocean Feeding Relationships
  • What is a Food Chain?
  • A food chain is a way to describe the feeding
    relationships between different organisms.

21
What are animals that eat plants called
again?Primary Consumers
What is a feeding relationship?
  • A feeding relationship describes who is eating
    what in a particular habitat.

22
Carnivores, or animals that eat primary
consumers, are called secondary consumers.
So a food chain shows who eats what in a
particular habitat. For example, a piece of
willow (tree) is eaten by a moose, which is then
eaten by a wolf.
23
The arrows between each item in the chain always
point in the direction of energy flow- in other
words, from the food to the feeder.
24
A food web is a model that shows all the possible
feeding relationships between organisms living in
an ecosystem.
The arrows between each item in the chain always
point in the direction of energy flow- in other
words, from the food to the feeder.
25
(No Transcript)
26
What is a keystone species?
  • Keystone Species a species that has a
    greater-than-expected effect on an ecosystem if
    it is removed from the environment, the entire
    ecosystem is affected dramatically (sometimes, it
    completely collapses).
  • Many keystone species are top predators (killer
    whales, starfish, wolves, bears)
  • Example In the food web above, killer whales are
    the keystone species. If they are removed from
    the environment, there will be too many salmon,
    which will provide more food for the seals and
    sea lions whos population will increase, then
    seals and sea lions along with salmon will eat
    all of the herring, which will lead to too many
    zooplankton, which will eat all of the
    phytoplankton, which will lead to not enough food
    for the baleen whale (and less oxygen).

27
Classwork
  • Create a chart or list of who eats what in the
    food web on the previous slide
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com