Ocean Currents Chapter 25 section 1 Think about it  What is a current?  Are all ocean currents the same?

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Transcript Ocean Currents Chapter 25 section 1 Think about it  What is a current?  Are all ocean currents the same?

Ocean Currents
Chapter 25 section 1
Think about it
 What is a current?
 Are all ocean currents the same?
Ocean Currents
 A movement of ocean water that follows a regular
pattern.
 But what does that really mean?
 What do currents do for us?
Different Types
 There are Two (2) main types of currents.
 Surface Currents*
 Deep Currents*
Surface Currents
• Surface currents are horizontal (side to side)
movements of ocean water caused by wind that occur
at or near the ocean’s surface.
• Pretty simple for us to remember, since they occur at
the SURFACE of the ocean.
• Surface currents are controlled by three factors: global
winds, the Coriolis effect, and continental deflections.
Global Winds
• Have you ever blown
gently on a cup of hot
chocolate?
• These small ripples are
just like surface currents,
just on a very small scale.
• In nature, your breath is
represented by wind.
Different Winds
 Different winds cause currents to flow in different
directions.
 Near the equator, the trade winds blow ocean water
east to west .
 Westerlies blow ocean water west to east.
Using Science
 Ships that transport
consumer goods (toys,
computers, cars) use
surface currents to
deliver their goods faster.
Continental Deflections
 Basically, the currents are constantly being pushed by
winds.
 Well, as their being pushed, they sometimes run into a
continent.
 When it runs into a continent (like South America) the
surface current gets deflected, and then continues.
Worth a Thousand Words
Coriolis Effect
 So we all know that the Earth is constantly rotating.
 We also know this rotation causes something we call
the Coriolis Effect*.
 Basically because the Earth is rotating, it causes
Surface currents to moved in a curved path, instead of
a straight path.
GYRES- huge circles of water caused by the Coriolis
Effect
5 major ocean gyres
Deep Currents
 These occur deep within the ocean.
 They are not controlled by winds.
 Deep currents* are controlled by Water Temperature
and Water Density (Salinity)
Density
 The colder the water gets, the denser (heavier) it is.
 Since heavy items sink, the colder water goes deeper
into the ocean.
Deep and Surface Interactions
a)
b)
c)
d)
Surface currents carry the
warmer, less-dense water from
other ocean regions to polar
regions.
Warm water from surface
currents replaces colder,
denser water that sinks to the
ocean floor.
Deep currents carry colder,
denser water along the ocean
floor from polar regions to
other ocean regions.
Water from deep currents
rises to replace water leaving
surface currents.
The Global Ocean
 The world has several oceans,
and while we have different
names for them, they are not
really separate.
 There are no walls between the
“oceans”
 Water is able to move freely
between them
 They are all one GLOBAL
OCEAN
Thermohaline circulation
 What does thermo mean?
 What does haline mean? (as in halite)
 What is thermohaline circulation?
GLOBAL CONVEYOR BELT
 There is a large-scale pattern to
the way that seawater moves
around the global ocean. This
pattern is driven by changes in
water temperature and salinity
that change the density of water.
It is known as the Global Ocean
Conveyor Belt or thermohaline
circulation. It affects water at the
ocean surface and all the way to
the deep ocean. It moves water
around the world.
Currents Concluded
1)
2)
3)
4)
5)
6)
Surface currents are stream like movements of water at or
near the surface of the ocean.
Surface currents are controlled by three factors: global
winds, the Coriolis effect, and continental deflections.
Deep currents are stream like movements of ocean water
located far below the surface.
Deep currents form where the density of ocean water
increases.
Water density depends on temperature and salinity.
Thermohaline circulation is the pattern of the water
movement in the global ocean due to temperature and
salinity changes in the water
How does the atmosphere
affect solar radiation?
20 % is absorbed
by clouds, dust and
gases
Solar
radiation
enters the
atmosphere
50% absorbed by
Earth’s surface
30% reflected by
clouds, dust, air and
Earth’s surface back
into space
Factors
Temperature
Precipitation
Latitude
Heat absorption and release
The temperature of the atmosphere in any region on Earth’s
surface depends on several factors, including latitude, surface
features, and the time of year and day.
There is a slight delay between
the absorption of energy and an
Increase in the temperature
Temperature
 Climate described using average temps
 Average daily temp (add high and low for day and
divide by 2)
 Use average daily temp to find the average monthly
temp/ use average monthly to find yearly average
 Scientists use a yearly temperature range (differences
between the highest and lowest monthly averages) to
describe climate
Precipitation
 Also described using monthly and yearly averages.
 Months that have largest amount of precipitation are
very important.
Latitude, heat absorption and release and topography
have the greatest influence on temperature and
precipitation
Latitude is the primary factor that affects the amount of solar
energy that reaches any point on Earth’s surface
The rays of the sun
strike the equator at
a 90 degree angle so
the energy is more
intense.
At a smaller angle
the energy is spread
out and less intense
.
Global wind patterns
 Belts of cool, dense air form at polar latitudes
 Belts of warm, less dense air form near the equator
 Cool air = high pressure regions
 Warm air= low pressure regions
 Differences in pressure creates WIND
As seasons change,
global wind belts shift
in a north or south
direction




Land heats faster than water…can reach a higher
temperature in the same amount of time
Why? Land is opaque and doesn’t move. Surface
ocean water is transparent and moves
continuously.
The temperature of the land or ocean influences
the amount of heat the air above the land or ocean
absorbs or releases (affecting the temp of the air,
affecting the climate of the area)
Water releases heat more slowly than land does.



The temperature of the ocean currents that
come in contact with the air influences the
amount of heat absorbed or released by the air.
EXAMPLE:
The combination of warm Atlantic current and
steady westerly winds give NW Europe a high
avg. temp for its latitude.

On the other hand, the Gulf Stream has little effect
on the Eastern U.S. because westerly winds blow the
Gulf Stream and its warm tropical air away from the
coast.