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Oceanography is the branch of Earth Science that studies the Earth's oceans and seas. It covers a wide range of topics, including marine organisms and ecosystem dynamics; ocean currents, waves, and geophysical fluid dynamics; plate tectonics and the geology of the sea floor; and fluxes of various chemical substances and physical properties within the ocean and across its boundaries. Oceanography Geological Oceanography Chemical Oceanography Biological Oceanography Physical Oceanography Geological oceanography, or marine geology is the study of the geology of the ocean floor including plate tectonics; Chemical oceanography, or marine chemistry is the study of the chemistry of the ocean and its chemical interaction with the atmosphere; Biological oceanography or marine biology is the study of the plants, animals and microbes of the oceans and their ecological interaction; Physical oceanography or marine physics studies the ocean's physical attributes including temperature-salinity structure, mixing, waves, internal waves, tides and currents. The area of the Earth is 510 M sq km. of this total, approximately 360 M sq km is represented by oceans and marginal seas. Northern Hemisphere- 61% water, 39% (Land Hemisphere) land. Southern Hemisphere- 81% water, 19% (Water Hemisphere) land Northern Hemisphere Southern Hemisphere Oceans of the World 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Pacific Ocean Atlantic Ocean Indian Ocean Southern Ocean Arctic Ocean Pacific Ocean covers more than 166 million square kilometers about 1/3 of the Earth surface Atlantic Ocean covers an area of 82 million sq km Indian Ocean covers an area of about 73 million sq km Southern Ocean large circumpolar body of water totally encircling the continent of Antarctica Arctic Ocean the smallest ocean - more than five times smaller than the Indian and Atlantic oceans Geological Oceanography concerns the nature of the earth beneath the oceans: how ocean basins form and are destroyed as the continents separate and collide during the plate tectonic cycle; how sediment forms, accumulates, and is modified, eroded and transported; and how material exchange occurs at the ocean floor. Geological Oceanography The Ocean Floor Three Major Units 1. Continental margin 2. Ocean basin floor 3. Mid-ocean ridge Geological Oceanography Bathymetry is the measurement of ocean depths and the charting of the shape or topography of the ocean floor. 1. Challenger Expedition 2. SONAR (Sound Navigation and Ranging) or echo sounder 3. Multi-beam SONAR 4. Satellite altimetry Geological Oceanography Bathymetry Echo sounding is a method of measuring depth using powerful sound pulses. The time it takes for the sound pulse to travel to the sea bed and bounce back is a measure of the depth. • The speed of sound in water is 1500 m/s. Thus, depth of any part of an ocean is given by d= ½ (1500 m/s X echo travel time) Multibeam systems can provide more accurate measurements than echo sounders. Multibeam systems collect data from as many as 121 beams to measure the contours of the ocean floor. Bathymetry Bathymetry Satellite altimetry is an indirect way of measuring depth and detecting sea floor features. Satellites measure the sea surface height from their orbits by bouncing rapid pulses of radar energy off the ocean surface. Sea floor features like submerged mountains -- see figure below -have more mass than sea water. This extra mass pulls the sea surface into gentle “hills” above the features. Thus we can “see” features below the surface by measuring the variations in sea surface height that these features cause! Continental Margin Passive Continental Margin Active Continental Margin 1. Continental shelf 2. Continental slope 3. Continental rise Geological Oceanography Continental Margins There are two types of continental margins: 1. Passive margins, also called “Atlantic-type” margins, face the edges of diverging tectonic plates. Very little volcanic or earthquake activity is associated with passive margins. 2. Active margins, known as “Pacific-type” margins, are located near the edges of converging plates, where one plate dives beneath another at an oceanic trench, in the process of subduction. Active margins are therefore sites of extensive volcanic and earthquake activity. Passive VS. Active Continental Margins The active margin has subduction at an oceanic trench occurring next to it. The passive margin faces the diverging plate boundary of the mid-ocean ridge. Continental Margin The CONTINENTAL MARGIN is the transition to the deep ocean basin. The margin belongs mostly to the continent. Geological Oceanography PASSIVE CONTINENTAL MARGINS are found along the remaining coastlines. Because there is no collision or subduction taking place, tectonic activity is minimal and the earth's weathering and erosional processes are winning. Geological Oceanography The shallowest portion of the margin and the portion nearest to the continent is the CONTINENTAL SHELF. This feature is simply an underwater extension of the adjacent abovewater portion of the continent, the COASTAL PLAIN. Geological Oceanography The CONTINENTAL SLOPE, as its name implies, is the sloping edge of the continent as it merges into the deep ocean basin. Geological Oceanography The CONTINENTAL RISE is a wedge of sediment that has accumulated at the base of the slope due to the change in gradient from the steeper slope to the virtually flat abyssal plain. The continental rise is named because of the “rise” of the bottom seen by fathometers as ships approach the continent. Geological Oceanography Passive Continental Margin Geological Oceanography An ACTIVE CONTINENTAL MARGIN is found on the leading edge of the continent where it is crashing into an oceanic plate. Geological Oceanography Ocean Basin floor 1.Abyssal plains 2.Seamounts (tall volcanic peaks) 3.Deep-ocean trenches Geological Oceanography The OCEAN BASIN FLOOR lies between the continental margin and the oceanic ridge. The size of this region is almost 30% of the Earth’s surface. Geological Oceanography ABYSSAL (a= without, byssus= bottom) PLAINS are deep, incredibly flat features. These regions are likely the most level places on Earth. Geological Oceanography SEAMOUNTS are isolated volcanic peaks which may rise hundreds of meters above the surrounding topography. GUYOTS or TABLEMOUNTS are submerged, flat-topped seamounts. Geological Oceanography DEEP-OCEAN TRENCHES are long, relatively narrow creases in the seafloor that form the deepest parts of the ocean. Challenger Deep (Mariana Trench)- deepest part known part of the world ocean Geological Oceanography Mid-Ocean Ridge OCEANIC RIDGE or MID-OCEAN RIDGE is topographically elevated feature that is found near the center of the most ocean basins. It is characterized by extensive faulting and numerous volcanic structures that have developed on the newly formed crust. Geological Oceanography The Ocean Floor Geological Oceanography Composition of Seawater The most important components of seawater that influence life forms are salinity, temperature, dissolved gases (mostly oxygen and carbon dioxide), nutrients, and pH. Chemical Oceanography Seawater consists of about 3.5 percent (by weight) of dissolved mineral substances that are collectively termed “salts”. Chemical Oceanography Salinity The total amount of solid material dissolved in water. More specifically, it is the ratio of the mass of dissolved substances to the mass of the water sample. It is expressed in parts per thousand (0/00). Chemical Oceanography Thus, the average salinity of seawater is 3.5% or 35 0/00. Chemical Oceanography Salinity map showing areas of high salinity (36 o/oo) in green, medium salinity in blue (35 o/oo), and low salinity (34 o/oo) in purple. Salinity is rather stable but areas in the North Atlantic, South Atlantic, South Pacific, Indian Ocean, Arabian Sea, Red Sea, and Mediterranean Sea tend to be a little high (green). Areas near Antarctica, the Arctic Ocean, Southeast Asia, and the West Coast of North and Central America tend to be a little low (purple). Chemical Oceanography Variations occur in ocean salinity The most common factor is the relative amount of evaporation or precipitation in an area. If there is more evaporation than precipitation then the salinity increases (since salt is not evaporated into the atmosphere). If there is more precipitation (rain) than evaporation then the salinity decreases. Chemical Oceanography Another factor that can change the salinity in the ocean is due to a very large river emptying into the ocean. The runoff from most small streams and rivers is quickly mixed with ocean water by the currents and has little effect on salinity. But large rivers (like the Amazon River in South America) may make the ocean have little or no salt content for over a mile or more out to sea. Chemical Oceanography The freezing and thawing of ice also affects salinity. The thawing of large icebergs (made of frozen fresh water and lacking any salt) will decrease the salinity while the actual freezing of seawater will increase the salinity temporarily. This temporary increase happens in the first stages of the freezing of seawater when small ice crystals form at about minus 2 degrees Centigrade. Chemical Oceanography These tiny, needle-like ice crystals are frozen freshwater and the salts are not part of them so the liquid between these crystals becomes increasingly salty to the point of it being a brine. Eventually though, as seawater freezes, the ice crystals trap areas with brine and the entire large piece of frozen seawater (ice floe) is salty. Chemical Oceanography Many marine organisms are highly affected by changes in salinity. This is because of a process called osmosis which is the ability of water to move in and out of living cells, in response to a concentration of a dissolved material, until an equilibrium is reached. Chemical Oceanography In general the dissolved material does not easily cross the cell membrane so the water flows by osmosis to form an equilibrium. Marine organisms respond to this as either being osmotic conformers (also called poikilosmotic) or osmotic regulators (or homeosmotic). Chemical Oceanography Osmotic conformers have no mechanism to control osmosis and their cells are the same salt content as the liquid environment in which they are found (in the ocean this would be 35 o/oo salt). If a marine osmotic conformer were put in fresh water (no salt), osmosis would cause water to enter its cells (to form an equilibrium), eventually causing the cells to pop (lysis). Chemical Oceanography If a marine osmotic conformer were put in super salty water (greater than 35 o/oo salt) then osmosis would cause the water inside the cells to move out, eventually causing the cells to dehydrate (plasmolyze). These marine osmotic conformers include the marine plants and invertebrate animals which do not do well in areas without a normal salinity of 35 o/oo. Chemical Oceanography Osmotic regulators have a variety of mechanisms to control osmosis and the salt content of their cells varies. It does not matter what the salt content is of the water surrounding a marine osmotic regulator, their mechanisms will prevent any drastic changes to the living cells. Marine osmotic regulators include most of the fish, reptiles, birds and mammals. These are the organisms that are most likely to migrate long distances where they may encounter changes in salinity. An excellent example of this is the salmon fish. Chemical Oceanography The fish is about 18 o/oo salt so in seawater it tends to dehydrate and constantly drinks the seawater. Special cells on the gills (called chloride cells) excrete the salt so the fish can replace its lost water. When a salmon migrates to fresh water its cells start to take on water so the salmon stops drinking and its kidneys start working to produce large amounts of urine to expel the water. Chemical Oceanography Temperature Seawater temperature map showing areas of warmer water in red and areas of cooler water is blue. White areas represent ice. Chemical Oceanography The temperature of seawater varies with the amount of sun that hits that area. This includes the length of time as well as the angle of the sun's rays. The longer the time and the more direct the rays of the sun fall on the ocean, the greater the temperature of seawater. Thus, tropical areas that get more year-round sun and more direct sun (almost 90 degrees, straight down for most of the year at noon) have warmer surface waters than polar areas that may have no sun at all for several months each year and then very steep angles of the sun's rays (never directly overhead at noon). Chemical Oceanography Knowing this about ocean water helps us understand that surface ocean temperatures are warm in the tropics (up to 30 or more degrees C) and cooler at the poles (down to -2 degrees C). But, when we look below the surface we find that the oceans are also vertically stratified and marine scientists recognize a basic three layered ocean - the upper mixed layer, the main thermocline, and deep (bottom) water. Chemical Oceanography The upper mixed layer is all one temperature but that temperature can vary from -2 degrees C, at the poles, to +30 degrees C, in the tropics. It all depends on the latitude and effects of the sun's heat and may be highly seasonal. The depth of this layer can be anything between the surface and 200 meters deep - usually the 200 meter depth is near the equator. The volume of this upper mixed layer is only about two percent of the volume of the ocean water. Chemical Oceanography The main thermocline is an area of rapidly decreasing temperature with depth. This changes with latitude and may begin at 200 meters (the bottom of the mixed layer) in the tropics where it may end at close to 1,000 meters (or anywhere above that depending on the strength of the sun). It may also begin right at the surface of the ocean in high temperate areas and extend to a variety of depths. This layer shifts up and down with the seasons in the temperate areas. The main thermocline comprises only 18 percent of the volume of the ocean water. Chemical Oceanography Deep (or bottom) water is always one cold temperature ranging between -2 to +5 degrees C. It is below the main thermocline (at the bottom of the thermocline there is no longer a decrease in water temperature with depth ... it is all one cold temperature). It is not affected by the seasons. This layer has most of the seawater and comprises close to 80 percent of all ocean water by volume. It is under the tropical areas, most temperate areas when there is a main thermocline, and is all the way to the surface in the polar areas (where there is no thermocline). Chemical Oceanography Chemical Oceanography Seawater temperature affects marine organisms by changing the reaction rates within their cells. Although each species has a specific range of temperature at which it can live, the warmer the water gets the faster the reactions and the cooler the water the slower the reactions. Chemical Oceanography An organism's response to water temperature is considered to be cold blooded (or poikilothermic) or warm blooded (homeothermic) depending on their ability to control their internal body temperature. If any species is moved out of its temperature tolerance range it may die in a short time although temperatures on the cool side of the range are easier for organisms to tolerate than temperatures on the warm side because cell reactions just slow down in the cold but may speed up over six times the normal levels for each 10 degrees C of heat. Chemical Oceanography Cold blooded (poikilothermic) marine organisms lack any temperature controls. These include marine plants, invertebrates, most fish and marine reptiles. These species each have their specific temperature tolerance range within which they must live (some are adapted to polar temperatures, some to tropical temperatures). Some have a narrow range (and are thus very restricted) and some have a wide range (and are thus less restricted). Chemical Oceanography Warm blooded (homeothermic) marine organisms have some type of internal temperature controls to maintain a constant body temperature. These organisms include a few fish, all sea birds and mammals. This ability allows these warm blooded marine species to migrate over vast distances through various temperatures without problems and include some of the animals on Earth with the longest migrations. Chemical Oceanography Density Temperature, salinity and pressure affect the density of seawater. Large water masses of different densities are important in the layering of the ocean water (more dense water sinks). As temperature increases water becomes less dense. As salinity increases water becomes more dense. As pressure increases water becomes more dense. Chemical Oceanography A cold, highly saline, deep mass of water is very dense whereas a warm, less saline, surface water mass is less dense. When large water masses with different densities meet the denser water mass slips under the less dense mass. These responses to density are the reason for some of the deep ocean circulation models. Chemical Oceanography Dissolved Gases The concentration of dissolved oxygen and carbon dioxide are very important for marine life forms. Although both oxygen and carbon dioxide are a gas when outside the water, they dissolve to a certain extent in liquid seawater. Dissolved oxygen is what animals with gills use for respiration (their gills extract the dissolved oxygen from the water flowing over the gill filaments). Dissolved carbon dioxide is what marine plants use for photosynthesis. Chemical Oceanography The amount of dissolved gases varies according to the types of life forms in the water. Most living species (both plants and animals) need oxygen to keep their cells alive and are constantly using it up. Replenishment of dissolved oxygen comes from the photosynthetic activity of plants (during daylight hours only) and from surface diffusion (to a lesser extent). Chemical Oceanography If there are a large number of plants in a marine water mass then the oxygen levels can be quite high during the day. If there are few plants but a large number of animals in a marine water mass then the oxygen levels can be quite low. Oxygen is measured in parts per million (also called ppm) and levels can range from zero to over 20 ppm in temperate waters. Chemical Oceanography It only reaches 20 when there are a lot of plants in the water, it is very sunny with lots of nutrients, and the wind is whipping up the surface into a froth. In any water mass there is a maximum amount of dissolved gas that can be found (after which the gas no longer dissolves but bubbles to the surface). Chemical Oceanography This maximum amount increases with a decrease in temperature (thus cold water masses can hold more dissolved gases ... but they can also have none if it has been used up). So, just because a water mass is cold it does not mean it has a lot of dissolved gases. Chemical Oceanography This concept is a little tricky but just remember that the amount of dissolved gases in seawater depends more on the types of life forms (plants and animals) that are present and their relative proportions. Chemical Oceanography Dissolved Nutrients Fertilizers, like nitrogen (N), phosphorous (P), and potassium (K), are important for plant growth and are called 'nutrients.' The level of dissolved nutrients increases from animal feces and decomposition (bacteria, fungi). Surface water often may be lacking in nutrients because feces and dead matter tend to settle to the bottom of the ocean. Most decomposition is thus at the bottom of the ocean. Chemical Oceanography In the oceans most surface water is separated from bottom water by a thermocline (seasonal in temperature and marginal polar regions, constant in tropics) which means that once surface nutrients get used up (by the plants there) they become a limiting factor for the growth of new plants. Plants must be at the surface for the light. Nutrients are returned to surface waters by a special type of current called 'upwelling' and it is in these areas of upwelling that we find the highest productivity of marine life. Chemical Oceanography Silica and iron may also be considered important marine nutrients as their lack can limit the amount of productivity in an area. Silica is needed by diatoms (one of the main phytoplanktonic organisms that forms the base of many marine food chains. Iron is just recently being discovered to be a limiting factor for phytoplankton. Chemical Oceanography pH pH is a measure of the acidity or alkalinity of a substance and is one of the stable measurements in seawater. Ocean water has an excellent buffering system with the interaction of carbon dioxide and water so that it is generally always at a pH of 7.5 to 8.5. Chemical Oceanography Neutral water is a pH of 7 while acidic substances are less than 7 (down to 1, which is highly acidic) and alkaline substances are more than 7 (up to 14, which is highly alkaline). Anything either highly acid or alkaline would kill marine life but the oceans are very stable with regard to pH. If seawater was out of normal range (7.5-8.5) then something would be horribly wrong. Chemical Oceanography In summary, the salinity and pH of seawater are relatively stable measurements whereas temperature, dissolved oxygen, and nutrients may vary. Chemical Oceanography Ocean Life A wide variety of organisms inhabit the marine environment. These organisms range in size from microscopic bacteria and algae to blue whales. Most organisms live within the sunlit surface waters of the ocean. Strong sunlight supports photosynthesis. Biological Oceanography Classification of Marine Organisms Marine organisms can be classified to where they live (their habitat) and how they move (their mobility) Organisms that inhabit the water column can be classified as either plankton (floaters) or nekton (swimmers). All other organisms are benthos (bottom dwellers). Biological Oceanography Plankton Plankton consist of any drifting organisms (animals, plants, or bacteria) that inhabit the pelagic zone of oceans, seas, or bodies of fresh water. Plankton are defined by their ecological niche rather than their genetic classification. They provide a crucial source of food to aquatic life. Biological Oceanography Plankton are primarily divided into broad functional (or trophic level) groups: 1. Phytoplankton (from Greek phyton, or plant), autotrophic, prokaryotic or eukaryotic algae that live near the water surface where there is sufficient light to support photosynthesis. Among the more important groups are the diatoms, cyanobacteria and dinoflagellates. 2. Zooplankton (from Greek zoon, or animal), small protozoans or metazoans (e.g. crustaceans and other animals) that feed on other plankton and telonemia. Some of the eggs and larvae of larger animals, such as fish, crustaceans, and annelids, are included here. Biological Oceanography 3. Bacterioplankton, bacteria and archaea, which play an important role in remineralizing organic material down the water column (note that the prokaryotic phytoplankton are also bacterioplankton). Biological Oceanography Nekton refers to the aggregate of actively swimming aquatic organisms in a body of water (usually oceans or lakes) able to move independently of water currents. Nekton are contrasted with 'plankton' which refers to the aggregate of passively floating, drifting, or somewhat motile organisms occurring in a body of water, primarily comprising tiny algae and bacteria, small eggs and larvae of marine organisms, and protozoa and other minute predators. Biological Oceanography Oceanic nekton comprises animals from three phyla • Chordates form the largest contribution, these animals are supported by either bones or cartilage. • Mollusks are animals like octopodes and squids. • Arthropods are animals like shrimp. Biological Oceanography Biological Oceanography Ocean Circulation A. Surface Circulation *Currents are masses of ocean water that flow from one place to another. Surface currents develop from friction between the ocean and the wind that blows across its surface. These are relatively permanent phenomena and considered to be responses to local/seasonal variations Physical Oceanography Physical Oceanography Surface currents, shown below, are driven by the winds. Warm water is red and cold water is blue. The Trade Winds propel ocean water westward along the equator, and when it strikes a continent, it is diverted poleward. However, a narrow return flow also occurs along the equator. In midlatitudes the currents are driven eastward by the Westerlies. The opposing wind belts cause currents in all the ocean basins to form gyres, or giant loops. Physical Oceanography Ocean Circulation Patterns Gyres are large whirls of water within an ocean basin (North Pacific, South Pacific, North Atlantic, South Atlantic, Indian Ocean). The center of each gyre coincides with the subtropics (30 degrees N or S from the equator) Subtropical gyres in NH rotate clockwise while those in the SH rotate the other way because of Coriolis effect. Physical Oceanography The Gulf Stream • Most studied current • Flows northward along the East Coast of the United States • So named because it carries warm water from the Gulf of Mexico and because it is narrow and well-defined like a stream Physical Oceanography • Today, satellites reveal that warm waters of the Gulf Stream has many complexities including prominent bends called meanders which produce large circular eddies that spin off from the main current and can last for up to two years before dissipating. Ocean currents have an important effect on climates. Physical Oceanography • Aside from producing currents, winds also cause vertical water movements. • The rising of cold water from deep layers to replace warm surface water is called UPWELLING, a common wind-induced vertical movement. Physical Oceanography • Coastal upwelling happens along the west coasts of continents. • As the surface layer moves away from the coast, it is replaced by water that “upwells” from below the surface. This slow upward movement from depths of 50 to 300 meters brings water that is cooler than the original surface water and results in lower surface water temperatures near the shore. Physical Oceanography Deep-Ocean Circulation • Has a significant vertical component that accounts for the thorough mixing of deep water masses • This component of ocean circulation is a response to DENSITY DIFFERENCES among water masses that cause denser water to sink and spread out beneath the surface. Physical Oceanography • Since density difference is caused by variations in temperature and salinity, deep-ocean circulation is also referred as THERMOHALINE CIRCULATION. • Most water involved in deep-ocean currents begins in high latitudes. Surface water becomes cold and its salinity increases as sea ice forms. When this surface water becomes dense enough, it sinks, initiating deep ocean currents. Once this water sinks, it is removed from the physical processes that increased its density in the first place, so its temperature and salinity remain largely unchanged. Physical Oceanography • Near Antarctica, surface conditions create the highestdensity water in the world. This cold saline water brine slowly sinks to the seafloor, where it moves throughout the ocean basins in sluggish currents. After sinking from the surface to the ocean, deep waters will not reappear at the surface for an average of 500 to 2000 years. Physical Oceanography • A simplified model of ocean circulation is similar to a conveyor belt that travels from the Atlantic through the Indian and pacific Oceans and back again. In this model, warm water in the ocean’s upper layers flows poleward, converts to dense water and return s equatorward as cold deep water that eventually upwells to complete the circuit. As this “conveyor belt” moves around the globe, it influences the global climate by converting warm water to cold and liberating heat to the atmosphere. Physical Oceanography Ocean in Motion: Waves • As wind passes over the water's surface, friction forces it to ripple. The strength of the wind, the distance the wind blows (fetch) and the length of the gust (duration) determine how big the ripples will become. • Waves are divided into several parts: crest, trough, wavelength, wave height and wave period. Physical Oceanography Physical Oceanography • The crest is the highest point on a wave, while the trough, or valley between two waves, is the lowest point. Wavelength is the horizontal distance, either between the crests or troughs of two consecutive waves. Wave height is a vertical distance between a wave's crest and the next trough. Wave period measures the size of the wave in time. A wave period can be measured by picking a stationary point and counting the seconds it takes for two consecutive crests or troughs to pass it. Physical Oceanography • In deep water, a wave is a forward motion of energy, not water. In fact, the water does not even move forward with a wave. If we followed a single drop of water during a passing wave, we would see it move in a vertical circle, returning to a point near its original position at the wave's end. Physical Oceanography •These vertical circles are more obvious at the surface. As depth increases, their effects slowly decrease until completely disappearing about half a wavelength below the surface. Physical Oceanography The water droplet moves in a vertical circle as the wave passes. The droplet moves forward with the wave's crest and backward with the trough. References: Tarbuck, Edward J. et al. 2003. 10th edition Earth Science. Pearson Education, Inc., USA. http://www.onr.navy.mil/focus/ocean/motion/ currents1.htm