* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download psci183_oceansI - Cal State LA
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Oceans The Last Frontier Ocean Facts • • • • • About 71% of Earth’s surface is covered by water Average depth of the Pacific Ocean = 4,638 m Average depth of the Atlantic Ocean = 3,872 m Average temperature = 3.9°C (39.0°F) Age of oceans = 4 billion years Salinity in Oceans • Salinity – Total amount of dissolved solids expressed in grams in 1 kg of water • Average salinity in oceans = 35 ‰ – 35 parts per thousand (ppt) – 35 g/kg • Salinity variations – Due to differences in local rates of evaporation and precipitation (water budget) Constituents of Sea Water • Most abundant seawater elements are sodium (Na+) + chloride (Cl-) • Major constituents: SO42-, Mg2+, Ca2+, K+, and HCO3• Minor and trace elements also present Salts in the Ocean Why is the ocean salty? • Salts come from: – River discharge – Volcanic eruptions • Why is the ocean not getting saltier? – Salts going in = salts going out Salts Going Out • Sea Sra • Sea Spray • Evaporites • Biological – Fecal pellets – Shell formation • Adsorption • Mid-ocean ridge magma Factors Affecting Salinity • Precipitation • Evaporation • River runoff • Freezing Principle of Constant Proportions – The amount of salt varies, but the relative proportions of ions are constant – Because of this principle, it is necessary to test for 1 salt ion (usually Cl) to determine total amount of salt present Determining Salinity 1. Calculating Salinity – Salinity=1.8065 x chlorinity (‰) 2. Salinometers – Salinity determined by the electrical conductivity produced by dissolved salts Oceans II Surface Currents Heat Variations Latitude • Depends on angle sunlight hits surface – Sunlight at polar latitudes covers wider area; therefore, less heat – At equator, sunlight covers less area; more heat Heat Transfer • Heat is transferred from equator to poles – Air Circulation – Ocean currents Origin of Currents • Ocean surface currents are wind driven • Air movement due to less dense air rising and more dense air sinking • Horizontal air flow along Earth’s surface is wind • Air circulating in this manner is convection currents Wind Movement Non-rotating Earth • Simple wind pattern – Warm air rises at equator, flows toward poles – Air cools at poles, sinks, and flows toward equator • Winds named by direction from which they blow – North-blowing winds = southerly winds – South-blowing winds = northerly winds Wind Movement Rotating Earth • At equator, warm air rises – Zone of low pressure – Clouds and precipitation – Reaches troposphere and moves poleward – As it spreads, it cools • 30° N&S, cool air sinks – Area of high pressure – Dry conditions – Location of world deserts • 60° N&S, air masses meet – Form Polar Front – Air masses rise, diverge and sink @ 90° and 30° N&S Wind Movement • At equator, warm air rises, condenses and precipitates • At 30° and 90°, cool air sinks • Air that sinks does not flow back in a straight north-south path – it curves (Coriolis Effect) Rotation on a Globe • Buffalo and Quito located on same line of longitude (79ºW) • Both cities circles the globe in one day (360º/24 hours = 15º/1 hour) • Quito has larger circumference; thus, travels farther • Quito needs to travel faster than Buffalo Apparent Deflection • Hypothetical war game • If a cannonball is shot north from Quito • It will travel a straight path • But, because Earth is rotating east to west • The cannonball appears to veer to the right in Northern Hemisphere • This is the Coriolis Effect Wind Movement Coriolis Effect • Deflected winds due to movement over spinning object – Produce wind bands • In Northern Hemisphere: – Winds are deflected to the right – Travel clockwise around high P • In Southern Hemisphere: – Winds are deflected to the left – Travel counter-clockwise around high P Assume water-covered Earth Surface Current Circulation