Properties of Ocean Water Chapter 20-1 Properties of Ocean Water
Pure Water Colorless Odorless Tasteless Ocean water contains solids and gases dissolved within
Dissolved Gases Most abundant gases in ocean: Nitrogen N2 Oxygen O2 Carbon dioxide CO2
How do they get there? From streams and rivers Volcanic eruptions Organisms that live there Directly from atmosphere
Temperature Dissolve more readily in cold water Pop goes ‘flat’ quicker on warm days Cold areas dissolve gases more than tropical areas
Temperature Cold areas hold onto CO2 Warm areas release more CO2 into the atmosphere
Carbon Sink Oceans have 60% more carbon than atmosphere Important to regulate climate. Why?
Dissolved Solids 3.5% of oceans mass Sea salts Halite makes up 85% of solids
Where do they come from? Volcanic eruptions Chemical weathering on land Chemical weathering between water and rocks
Salinity Salinity – Measure of amount of dissolved salts and other solids
Salinity Factors that change: Evaporation Precipitation
Surface Water Distributes heat from 100 – 300 m Tropical: 30 C Polar: -1.9 C Ocean water can freeze at this temperature
Pack Ice Pack ice – floating sea ice 5 m thick
Thermocline Thermocline – layer in ocean where water temperatures drop faster than in other areas
Deep Water 2 C Colder = denser Controls deep water currents
Density Salinity and temperature Denser than pure water Denser - colder
Color Determined by the way it absorbs or reflects sunlight Blue light reflected Phytoplankton can affect color