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What do you know about oceans? Explain at least two things.
What do you know about our oceans? Arctic Ocean Baltic Sea Persian Gulf Bay of Fundy Atlantic Ocean Pacific Ocean Indian Ocean Antarctic Ocean Oceans cover 2/3 of the Earth’s surface. Fig. 16.1, p.400
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Northern Hemisphere is approximately 39% land.
The Hemispheres of the Earth Northern Hemisphere is approximately 39% land. The Southern Hemisphere is approximately 19% land.
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Topography There are mountains under the ocean larger than Mt. Everest
15CO, p.374
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Mid-oceanic ridges Trenches Island arcs Hot spots
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Highest mountain Mt. Everest 8848 meters
Average elevation of continents 840 meters Sea level Average depth of oceans – 3800 meters Floor of central oceans about – 5000 meters Deepest ocean trench Mariana trench – 11,000 meters Millions of square kilometers Percent of Area Fig. 15.3, p.377
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How do we map the ocean floor? Sonar and Radar
Sonar: measuring the time sound waves take to return to ship Known facts: travel time to bottom and back Speed of sound in sea water The distance is determined by plugging these values into a simple formula
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Geosat satellite Launched in 1985 Orbits the Earth in about 14 hours
The Earth rotates Satellite map of the Earth’s topography, 1.5 years For every increase of 1000 meters on the seafloor, there is 1 meter increase in height of water.
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Geosat image of the ocean floor
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Active margin: contains a plate boundary
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Variations in temperature:
From north to south due to the Sun’s radiation
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Changes in the Sun’s angle cause variations in the amount of solar energy reaching Earth’s surface.
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Variations in Sun’s rays with latitude
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Layers of the Ocean: what determines the ocean’s layers?
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Temperature: warmer at equator cooler near the poles
Surface temperature variations
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Three layers: Mixed, Thermocline, Deep zone
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Source of salts? Volcanic activity: outgassing
Chemical weathering of rocks (dissolved load)
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Precipitation
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Density determines the vertical position
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Intertidal Zone Area between high tide line and low tide line
Organisms adapted to harsh, changing environments Intertidal Zone Continental Shelf
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Neritic Zone Area over the continental shelf
Area of greatest density and diversity of marine life Neritic Zone Continental Shelf
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Oceanic Zone From the continental break out to open ocean Oceanic Zone
Shelf
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Lifestyles 3 Basic Lifestyles:
Plankton – float with currents. Can not swim Nekton – Swim freely Benthos – Crawl on the ocean floor. Can not swim
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Plankton: microscopic animals and plants
Diatom-phytoplankton bottom of the food chain Use basic nutrients from sea water to produce skeletons and soft tissue phytoplankton produce greater than 50% Zooplankton Copepod-1mm Dinoflagellate- 250 microm.
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Nekton (swimmers) 5 Categories: Reptiles Mammals Fish Arthropods
Mollusks
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Nekton (swimmers) Marine Reptiles: Turtles Snakes Crocodiles Iguanas
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Benthos (bottom dwellers)
Vagrant: Crabs Sea Stars Sea Cucumbers Sea Urchins Brittle Stars
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Coriolis effect: earth’s rotation causes gyres
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Gyres or circular patterns in the oceans create currents
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Fig , p.407
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Ocean currents influence climate
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Tsunami – Great Wave
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