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Problem 1 What property of water does pH measure? (one or two-word answer) What is the typical pH of seawater? What is the typical pH of freshwater? A fluid that has a pH of 4 is ________ times more _____ than a fluid with a pH of 8. a b c d e f 2 acidic 2 alkaline 40 acidic 40 alkaline 10000 acidic 10000 alkaline Problem 2 Place a letter next to the currents listed below, indicating their location on the accompanying map. Agulhas Current Alaskan Stream Gulf Stream Kuroshio Labrador Current Oyashio The strongest currents tend to occur on the (eastern or western) boundary of the ocean basins. The dominant driving force for these currents is what? (one word answer) These currents are all example of what? Ekman currents Thermohaline currents Geostrophic currents Longshore currents Equatorial currents Problem 3 On the accompanying map, Mark one major feature in both the Pacific basin and Atlantic basin that is associated with “diverging oceanic plates”. Mark one major feature in the Pacific basin that is associated with “converging oceanic and continental plates”. Mark one major feature in the Pacific basin that is associated with “transform faults”. Problem 4 Label the type of reef/island formation shown in the figure: Top: Middle: Bottom: What animal or plant is responsible for the underwater part of these formations? (one word answer) What geologic process is responsible for the above-water part of these formations? (one word answer) Problem 5 Wave gauges were used to measure the wave activity at three different points. - In the midst of a storm in the open ocean. - 500 km from the storm - 1000 km from the storm Label the above locations with the letter of the corresponding graph. In graph A, what is the approximate period of the wave? (one significant digit) In graph A, what is the approximate wave height? (one significant digit) (Hand-sketched graph not included) Problem 6 If all the ice floating in the ocean melted due to global warming, then mean sea level around the world would: - Rise by 10’s of meters rise by several meters stay about the same lower by several meters lower by 10’s of meters What are the primary two factors associated with sea level rise? Problem 7 Describe the differences and similarities of ocean gyres and ocean eddies. Answers 1: Acidity or alkalinity (the concentration of H+ ions); 8 pH for seawater; 7 pH for pure water; 10000 times more acidic (pH is a logarithmic scale) 2: F: Agulhas Current C: Alaskan Stream D: Gulf Stream A: Kuroshio E: Labrador Current B: Oyashio Western; wind; geostrophic currents 3: e.g.: Pacific: East Pacific Rise; Atlantic: Mid-Atlantic Ridge (plus a few others) e.g.: West coast of South America (plus many others) e.g.: western California (plus many others) 4: top: fringing reef; middle: atoll; bottom: barrier reef; coral; volcanoes or vulcanism or volcanism 5: midst: B (lots of irregular wiggles/seas) 500km: C (shorter period waves/swell) 1000km A (longer period waves/swell) Period is about 7 or 8 seconds Height is about 10 meters (twice the “amplitude” which is 5m) 6: - stay about the same. (If land-locked ice – glaciers, ice sheets, etc – were to melt, then the ocean would rise 10’s of meters) mass and heat (mass meaning “more water”, heat causing thermal expansion making the ocean less dense and hence occupying more space) 7: Gyres and eddies both circulate laterally, spinning either clockwise or counterclockwise Gyres are basin-scale features (1000’s of km); eddies are smaller-scale features (10km to 100km) Gyres are wind-forced; eddies occur as instabilities of the gyre-scale currents Gyres tend to be “permanent” meaning you can always find them there; eddies ten to be “transient” meaning they are only sometimes found (they come and go)