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Published byDiana Barton Modified over 9 years ago
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Music today: Little Mermaid, “Under the Sea” WELCOME OSU MOMS!!
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Deep Ocean Circulation Motion in the Ocean, Part 2, or Who wants to ride the Great Conveyor Belt?
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Surface Circulation
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How does the Deep Ocean respond to Surface Circulation? F The main gyres move heat and salt F Resulting DENSITY variations lead to vertical flow (sinking) F Formation of “water masses”, characterized by Temperature, Salinity
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Density Variation in Sea Water
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North Atlantic Circulation
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Density-Driven Water Flow F Called “Thermohaline Circulation”, because temperature and salinity together determine density of seawater “Thermo” = temperature “haline” = salt
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Where does the Ocean’s Deepest Water Come From? F The densest seawater is cold and salty F This is formed at high latitudes in the North and South Atlantic: North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) Antarctic Bottom Water (AABW)
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Density Rules!
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Underwater “Waterfalls”
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Water Masses and ocean mixing
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Thermohaline Circulation
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The Great Conveyor Belt
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Semi-Enclosed Basins: Mediterranean Water
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Mediterranean Water
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Tracking Motion (direction & velocity) fixed mobile
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Tracers in the Ocean F Track the motion (direction and velocity) F 14 C, cosmic rays in the upper atmos (half-life is 5700 years) 3 H, nuclear weapons testing (half-life is 12.5 years) CFCs, chlorinated fluoro-carbons
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Consequences of Global Flow
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F Ocean turnover is about 1500 years (time for a round trip on the conveyor belt) F Deep water (made in the polar Atlantic) contains abundant O 2 and CO 2 F The high O 2 content promotes oxidation of bottom sediments (e.g., CaCO 3 ) F The CO 2 content controls CCD (Carbonate Compensation Depth)
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Carbonate Compensation Depth (CCD) Cold, acidic, salty Cold,
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Carbon Cycle and Global Warming F The temperature of bottom water formation determines how much CO 2 is dissolved in deep ocean water F The rate of overturn of the oceans determines the “burial rate” of C from the atmosphere F Organic C accumulates in sediments, depending on the O 2 content of deep ocean
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Carbon Cycle and Global Warming F Organic C in sediments is reduced to CH 4 (methane gas) F Methane gas migrates upward and can be trapped as frozen “gas hydrates” near the ocean floor
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Gas Hydrates “Salem Sue” New Salem, ND
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Gas Hydrates
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Gas Hydrates: Ice w/fuel and fire inside Light w/match
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Gas Hydrates
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Hydrate Ridge Image courtesy of Ocean Observatories Initiative Regional Scale Nodes Program, UW
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Hydrate Ridge Image courtesy of Ocean Observatories Initiative Regional Scale Nodes Program, UW Yaquina Bay, Newport
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Hydrate Ridge Image courtesy of Ocean Observatories Initiative Regional Scale Nodes Program, UW
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Climate Change Concerns F What happens when sea level falls? F What happens when deep water warms? F What about underwater landslides & earthquakes? F All of these liberate gas hydrates (CH 4 ), which combines with O 2 to form CO 2, ultimately reaching the atmosphere
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Deep Ocean Circulation F The ocean has an enormous capacity to absorb and release greenhouse gases F So, the rate, temperature and composition of seawater circulating through the deep ocean is vitally important in assessing long term climate change
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