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Review - Precipitation is caused by the uplift of moist air Air rising along the ITCZ or weather fronts (convergence) Convection caused by intense surface heating (not always accompanied by rain) Orographic uplift (rain deposited on windward side of mountains)
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Relative Scales of Cloud-Forming Processes
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Water Vapor Warm air can hold move water vapor What happens when you cool air? Undersaturated Supersaturated
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Global Circulation Where will rain fall?? High Pressure or Low Pressure
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Global air circulation Garrison 2.069
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Ocean circulation Surface currents –The Gulf Stream Upwelling –El Niño Vertical structure of the water column Deep water currents –The conveyor belt
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Surface currents top 50-100 m 10% of ocean volume is involved Wind drives the currents –Mostly trade winds and westerlies Water doesn’t get blown directly downwind –Friction of wind over water and Coriolis effect combine –Net transport at 45 o angle to wind direction. Ekman spiral
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Trades and westerlies drive gyres G9.1,2 2.153,154
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Surface circulation patterns Net effect is to cause rotational current systems Trade winds drive water east and away from equator Westerlies drive water west and toward equator
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Global surface currents Duxbury 8.5
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Currents and climate Miller 2.167
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Gulf Stream from space – sea surface temperature G9.11 2.179
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Energy Transport Surface ocean currents transport energy Especially effective in moving heat from the tropics The Gulf Stream
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Structure of the water column Typical verticle profile Top is “mixed layer” Water is stratified –Temperature –Salinity Most dense water on the bottom!
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Wind-induced upwelling / downwelling Offshore wind blows away the warm surface layer Brings up deeper waters. Deep waters are nutrient-rich Good fishing! Onshore wind suppresses upwelling
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Upwelling off South America 9.12a 2.209
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Sea surface temperatures off South America
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El Niño Trade winds falter (3-8 year cycle), normal offshore winds disappear. Lack of upwelling. Indicated by a rise in sea surface temperatures
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El Niño year 9.12b 2.207
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El Niño sea temperature
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Deep water currents Driven by density’ Dense (cooler, more saline) water sinks
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Ocean Temperatures Temperature varies N-S Solar energy inputs Variations due to currents
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Ocean Salinity High where evaporation high Low where it rains, river inputs and ice melt from caps
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Deep Water Formation Transport warm saline water north by Gulf Stream Cools in arctic Sea ice increases salinity Becomes dense - sinks
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The conveyor belt Flows along the ocean bottom to Antarctica, into the Pacific Ocean, and upwells in the north Pacific.
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