Download presentation
1
MOTION IN THE OCEAN Waves and Tides
2
Waves A disturbance which moves through or over the surface of a fluid
Mostly caused by winds (Also earthquakes, volcanoes, grav. pull) Form of great energy
3
Wave Characteristics Parts of a Wave Crest = high point
Trough = low point Height = vertical distance from crest to trough Wavelength = Horizontal distance between crest to crest or trough to trough
4
Size of Wind Generated Waves
Depends on 3 things: Wind Speed Wind Duration (length of time wind blows) “Fetch” Extent of open water across which the wind can blow
5
Water Motion in Waves Water travels in vertical circular orbits
Wave moves, particles don’t!
6
Importance of Waves Shaping Coastlines Ecology Erode cliffs
Grind rock into sand Ecology Returns O2 to water Stir up food for filter feeders
7
Types of Waves CHOP – Short period (back bays)
SWELL – Long period (boat rolls; seasickness) SWASH – water up beach BACKWASH – back down
8
Links/Videos Wave activity
10
TSUNAMI = “harbor wave” in Japanese
Caused by undersea quake or volcano Wavelength = ~150 mi. Wave height = 6” – 1’ Can NOT perceive in boat Speed > 500 mph Slows down to ~25 mph at shore; water builds up to ~65+ ft
11
Tsunami Waves
12
Indian Ocean Tsunami 2004 Indian Ocean 2004 Global Impact December 26, 2004 9+ magnitude earthquake Indian plate slid under Burma Plate, off coast of Sumatra dead 15,000 missing 2 million displaced
13
Tsunamis
14
Tides The rhythmic rise and fall of the ocean’s water
High tide = rising, incoming tide, flow Low tide = receding, outgoing tide, ebb Slack tide = vertical movement stops
15
Tides are very long, slow waves
They have a wave period of 12 hours 25 min Tidal day is 24 hours 50 min
16
What Causes Tides? 1. Gravitational pull of sun & moon on Earth
Although Sun is HUGE, Moon closer, therefore > effect Like magnet, pulls water away from surface = TIDAL BULGE
17
2. Centrifugal Forces Bulge on opposite side because centr. force > pull of moon Produced by motions of Earth, sun, & moon
18
Types of Tides Spring Tide
Moon and sun are in direct line with one another Results in unusually high tidal range Tidal Range = vertical distance between high & low tides 2x’s/month
19
Neap Tide sun and moon are at right angles
Pulls cancel each other out – causes a weak pull unusually low tidal range 2 x’s / month
20
Spring vs. Neap Tides
21
Distance bet. Moon & Earth
Perigee Tides Moon closest to earth, very high tides (causes flooding) Apogee Tides Moon farthest away from earth, very low tides
23
Types of Tides Continued
Diurnal Tides 1 high & 1 low / day Parts of Gulf of Mexico and Asia Semi-Diurnal Tides 2 high & 2 low / day Atlantic coasts of North America and Europe Mixed 2 high & 2 low / day (height varies) Pacific coast Why different types of tides?
24
Types of Tides
25
Importance of Tides Expose & submerge orgs
Circulate water in bays & estuaries Circulates food, wastes, etc Trigger spawning (grunion, horseshoe crab)
26
Currents What are currents? Causes - “Rivers” of circulating water
- Wind - Rotating Earth - Density Changes
28
Surface Ocean Currents
Broad, slow drifts; never cross equator Wind generated; circular gyres
29
Coriolis Effect - N. Hemis – clockwise; Right - S. Hemis – counterclockwise; Left
30
Gulf Stream - N. Atlantic
- Brings warm water from equator north along east coast of N. A. Sometimes form eddies – circulating water that pinches off from the current
31
IMPORTANCE OF SURF. CURRENTS
NAVIGATION MIGRATION WEATHER
32
Localized Surface Currents
Longshore Current. Flows parallel to shore; move sediment
33
RIP CURRENT - Caused by converging longshore currents - Very dangerous ; Red Flag - DO NOT fight rip current; swim parallel to shore to get out of channel
35
Deep Ocean Currents Flow beneath surface; cross equator
Separated from surface currents by boundary called a “Thermohaline” (diff in densities) Move North to South
36
Importance Of Deep Currents
Upwelling Brings deep water to surf. Circulates nutrients up Moves plankton & larvae
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.