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Weather & Circulation The ocean and its currents have a major influence on weather and climate on Earth. Background Image http://www.futura-sciences.com/img/willy.jpg Atmosphere • Air composed mostly of nitrogen and oxygen – Never dry – always contains water vapor – Air’s density determined by • Temperature • Water content • Weather - The state of the atmosphere at a given time and place, with respect to variables such as temperature, moisture, wind velocity, and barometric pressure. • Climate - The meteorological conditions, including temperature, precipitation, and wind, that characteristically prevail in a particular region. Background Image http://www.futura-sciences.com/img/willy.jpg Greenhouse Effect • Greenhouse effect - The atmosphere of our Earth traps heat – the energy from the sun also heats up the oceans. • 50% of radiation from the sun is absorbed by the Earth’s surface and then reflected back into the earth’s atmosphere. – Gases (carbon dioxide and water vapor) can stop this energy from escaping into space by keeping it here on Earth. Image Background Image http://www.futura-sciences.com/img/willy.jpg Global Warming • Scientists have noticed that the Earth is experiencing a warming trend. • In the past 100 years, the Earth’s mean global temperature has increased more than 1 degree Farenheit and ocean levels have risen • Global warming is the result, the gradual increase in Earth’s temperature. • Scientists measure polar ice caps to determine if their rate of melting continues to increase. Background Image http://www.futura-sciences.com/img/willy.jpg Measuring the Melt • • The graph below shows total ice coverage since 1973. As glacial ice melts, sea levels rise and ocean currents can change. Background Image http://www.futura-sciences.com/img/willy.jpg • • Average temperatures in the Arctic region are rising twice as fast as they are elsewhere in the world. Arctic ice is getting thinner, melting and rupturing. – the largest single block of ice in the Arctic, the Ward Hunt Ice Shelf, had been around for 3,000 years before it started cracking in 2000. Within two years it had split all the way through and is now breaking into pieces. The polar ice cap as a whole is shrinking. – Images from NASA satellites show that the area of permanent ice cover is contracting at a rate of 9 percent each decade. – If this trend continues, summers in the Arctic could become ice-free by the end of the century. • The melting of once-permanent ice is already affecting native people, wildlife and plants. – When the Ward Hunt Ice Shelf splintered, the rare freshwater lake it enclosed, along with its unique ecosystem, drained into the ocean. – Polar bears, whales, walrus and seals are changing their feeding and migration patterns, making it harder for native people to hunt them. Background Image http://www.futura-sciences.com/img/willy.jpg Carbon Dioxide levels • The amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has been steadily increasing. • As we continue to cut down trees for paper production, we are decreasing the plants that convert CO2 to oxygen, causing an increase in CO2 levels. • The burning of fossil fuels (oil, coal, etc) also adds carbon dioxide to the environment. Background Image http://www.futura-sciences.com/img/willy.jpg Natural Air Pollution • Even “clean” air is not perfectly clean. • It contains many pollutants from natural sources like dust, volcanic gases and ash, smoke from forest fires, pollen, etc. • Most of the air pollution mentioned in the news is a result of human activities. Image Background Image http://www.futura-sciences.com/img/willy.jpg Natural Cycle? • natural phenomenon - climate has gone through periods of warmth and periods of extreme cold (often known as an Ice Age). • Some scientists claim that the warming trend is part of a natural cycle that will eventually reverse itself through CO2 uptake by photosynthetic marine and terrestrial plant life. • Others claim that the warming of Earth’s atmosphere is a real problem that can be reduced by decreasing the use of fossil fuels and finding alternative energy sources. Background Image http://www.futura-sciences.com/img/willy.jpg Currents • Ocean currents - moving water connecting major landmasses on Earth – global ocean currents – largest currents that move across the ocean (like rivers that travel great distances) – affected by • global temperature • freshwater glacial ice melt • density differences due to salt concentrations and temperature differences. Background Image http://www.futura-sciences.com/img/willy.jpg Water’s Density • Density is important to the currents which shape the planet’s climate. – Fresh water is less dense than salty water. – Warm water has a lower density than cold water Background Image http://www.futura-sciences.com/img/willy.jpg Effect of Salinity • Salty water will sink while fresh water will rise because of differences in density. Image Background Image http://www.futura-sciences.com/img/willy.jpg In the Mediterranean • The Mediterranean Sea, for example, has a higher salinity than the Atlantic Ocean, creating a current south of Spain that moves salty water deep into the Atlantic Ocean. Image Background Image http://www.futura-sciences.com/img/willy.jpg Global Ocean Currents Background Image http://www.futura-sciences.com/img/willy.jpg Radiant Energy • The sun, the source of all energy on Earth, gives off radiant energy and influences the climate that we experience. • Angle of Isolation - the angle at which the rays of the sun strike the surface of the earth. – Determines the amount of radiant (or solar) energy that reaches any part of the planet • Areas farthest away from the sun’s rays (the poles) receive slanted rays with a larger angle, and are therefore less intense – Caused by: • The Earth’s curved surface • the tilt of its axis Background Image http://www.futura-sciences.com/img/willy.jpg Ocean Temperature • The uneven heating of the Earth due to the rays of the sun causes ocean temperatures to vary with latitude. • The ocean is warmest at the equator. Image Background Image http://www.futura-sciences.com/img/willy.jpg Coriolis Effect • The coriolis effect - the spinning Earth causes the winds and surface waters to move in a specific directions. • northern hemisphere - the currents deflect clockwise to the east. • southern hemisphere - currents move in the opposite direction, counter clockwise to the west. Image Background Image http://www.futura-sciences.com/img/willy.jpg Gyres • Gyres - giant circles created when the water moves and hits the continent which deflect the currents Image Background Image http://www.futura-sciences.com/img/willy.jpg Gulf Stream • The gulf stream current flows from the southwestern Atlantic to the northeastern – it is the major factor in favorable (warm) weather on the eastern coast of the United States. • Benjamin Franklin was the first to chart the temperature and speed of the gulf stream back in the 1700s. Background Image http://www.futura-sciences.com/img/willy.jpg Subsurface Currents • Subsurface currents - move because of differences in temperature and salinity. Background Image http://www.futura-sciences.com/img/willy.jpg Downwelling & Upwelling • Downwelling - After warm water has risen to the surface, it will eventually cool off and therefore sink again near the poles • Upwelling - When currents rise to the surface, they bring nutrient-rich sediments from the bottom. • Nutrients found on the floor of the ocean (such as phosphates & nitrates) are important for all organisms in aquatic food webs. Background Image http://www.futura-sciences.com/img/willy.jpg Coastal Currents • Waves – when currents eventually meet coastal areas – After a wave breaks on a beach, the forward momentum transports water up the slope of a beach. – The returning current or backwash is called the undertow. • Currents that move parallel to the beach are called longshore currents. • Spaces between islands off the coast of a continent, like Galveston and South Padre, cause a rush of water called a rip current that moves quickly out into the ocean. Background Image http://www.futura-sciences.com/img/willy.jpg Tidal Currents Image • The movement of the moon around the Earth and it’s gravity causes tides – the daily rise and fall of the ocean seen along the shore. • When a tide enters and leaves and area, the tidal change produces swift-moving tidal currents that run parallel to the shore. – important to aquatic food chains because they carry nutrients and small organisms back and forth between the bays and the offshore waters. Background Image http://www.futura-sciences.com/img/willy.jpg Ocean Wind • • • Convection currents occur in many different media (liquid, air, magma). Day Time – Often, the wind around the ocean creates a sea breeze • due to differences in temperature of the air over the ocean versus over land. – Water heats up slowly, while land heats up quickly. – A convection current is created because the cooler air over the ocean sinks and travels inland while the warm air over the land rises up. Night Time – The opposite occurs – land cools very quickly, but water has a very high specific heat and takes longer to cool. – The air over the water is warmer and wind travels out to the ocean in the reversed convection current. Background Image http://www.futura-sciences.com/img/willy.jpg Humidity • Humidity- amount of water vapor into the atmosphere – Coastal regions often have a higher level of humidity than inland areas because they are exposed to the moisture that evaporates from the ocean. Background Image http://www.futura-sciences.com/img/willy.jpg Fog & Dew • Fog - Air saturated with moisture creating clouds near the ground – forms when warm, moist air makes contact with a cold surface. – The mirror in your bathroom often “fogs” when warm moist air from the shower hits the cold surface of the mirror. • Dew - When water condenses (changes from a vapor to a liquid) on a solid surface Background Image http://www.futura-sciences.com/img/willy.jpg Hurricanes • • A hurricane -a coastal storm with a wind velocity exceeding 120 km/hr Form in warm tropical seas where there is hot, moist air – As hot, moist air rises, it cools in the upper atmosphere and condenses into ring shaped clouds. – During condensation, a great deal of heat energy is released, which causes more hot air to rise even quicker. – This whirlwind of rising air moves in a spiral direction around calm air knows as the “eye” of a hurricane. Background Image http://www.futura-sciences.com/img/willy.jpg ~ El Nino • • • • El Nino - Oceanic warming Begins in the western Pacific Ocean Warm currents are normally carried northwest due to trade winds. El Nino reverses the currents because of a decline in southeast trade winds • causes a change in the climate of South America (bringing floods and stormy weather). Background Image http://www.futura-sciences.com/img/willy.jpg ~ La Nina • La Nina - Unusually cold currents causing cooler surface temperatures • winters are cooler than normal in the northwest United states and warmer than normal in the southeast. • The cycles for El Nino/La Nina often last 1 to 2 years and occur every 4 to 6 years. • Click on the graphic to view an animation depicting the differences between El Nino and La Nina. Background Image http://www.futura-sciences.com/img/willy.jpg