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Monday February 25, 2013 (Ocean Water Circulation)

Monday February 25, 2013

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Monday February 25, 2013. ( Ocean Water Circulation ). The Launch Pad Monday, 2/25/13. Construct a simple marine food chain and describe the flow of energy through the chain. 98% energy loss. solar energy. phytoplankton. zooplankton. herring. 90% energy loss. 90% energy loss. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Monday February 25, 2013

MondayFebruary 25, 2013

(Ocean Water Circulation)

Page 2: Monday February 25, 2013

The Launch PadMonday, 2/25/13

Construct a simple marine food chain and describe the flow of energy through the chain.

phytoplankton zooplankton herring

tuna

solar energy

90% energy loss

90% energy loss

90% energy loss

98% energy loss

humans90% energy

loss

Page 3: Monday February 25, 2013

Announcements

Happy Peace Corps Week!

Page 4: Monday February 25, 2013

AnnouncementsI will be available after

school today until 4:45.

Page 5: Monday February 25, 2013

Assignment Currently Open

Summative or

Formative?Date Issued Date Due Date Into

GradeSpeedFinal Day

Quiz 18 S3 2/8 2/8 2/11 TODAY

Quiz 19 S4 2/15 2/15 ? FRIDAY

WS – Marine Life Zones and Ocean

ProductivityF17 2/20 2/21 ? FRIDAY

WS – Oceanic Feeding

RelationshipsF18 2/21 2/22 ? FRIDAY

Quiz 20 S5 2/22 2/22 ? 3/8

Page 6: Monday February 25, 2013

Recent Events in ScienceSpaceX CRS-2 Launch Set for March 1

Read All About It!www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/structure/launch/index.html

NASA and its international partners are targeting Friday, March 1, as the launch

date for the next cargo resupply flight to the International Space Station by Space Exploration Technologies (SpaceX).

Launch is scheduled for 10:10 a.m. EST from Space Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida. 

SpaceX's Dragon capsule will be filled with about 1,200 pounds of supplies for the

space station crew and experiments being conducted aboard the orbiting laboratory.

Dragon is scheduled to return to Earth March 25 for a parachute-assisted

splashdown in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of Baja California. It will be bringing

back more than 2,300 pounds of experiment samples and equipment. 

Page 7: Monday February 25, 2013

Ocean Water CirculationOcean currents are masses of

water that flow from one place to another.

Surface currents develop from friction between the ocean and the wind that blows across the

surface.Surface circulation of the oceans

are cause by many interacting “gyres”, which are large systems

of rotating ocean currents, particularly those involved with

large wind movements.

Page 8: Monday February 25, 2013

Ocean Water CirculationEarth’s oceanic surface circulation is made up of five main gyres.

North Pacific Gyre

The gyres are related to atmospheric circulation.

South Pacific Gyre

North Atlantic Gyre

South Atlantic GyreIndian Ocean Gyre

Page 9: Monday February 25, 2013

Idealized surface circulation

pattern for the Atlantic Ocean. The prevailing winds create

circular-moving loops of water (gyres) at the

surface in both parts of the

Atlantic Ocean basin.

Figure 15.2

Page 10: Monday February 25, 2013

Average ocean surface currents from February to March. The oceans circulation is organized into five major current gyres (large, circular-moving loops of water), which exist

in the North Pacific, South Pacific, North Atlantic, South Atlantic, and Indian Oceans.

Page 11: Monday February 25, 2013

Large ships crossing the ocean have lost entire containers overboard. if the containers release floating items, inadvertent float meters are launched that help oceanographers track ocean surface currents. The map shows the path of drifting

shoes and recovery locations from a spill in 1990.

Page 12: Monday February 25, 2013

Four Main Currents Exist Within Each Gyre

Page 13: Monday February 25, 2013

Surface CirculationGyres are caused by the Coriolis Effect,

an apparent deflection of moving objects caused by the rotation of the earth and the inertia of the mass experiencing the

effect.The Coriolis force is quite small, and its

effects generally become noticeable only for motions occurring over large

distances and long periods of time, such as large-scale movement of air in the atmosphere or water in the ocean.

This force causes moving objects on the surface of the Earth to appear to veer to

the right in the northern hemisphere, and to the left in the southern.

Surface currents are extremely important to Earth’s climate, as they transfer

warmer water from low latitudes into higher latitudes, and thereby move heat

from warmer to cooler areas.

Page 14: Monday February 25, 2013

This false-color satellite image

shows sea-surface

temperatures of the Gulf Stream.Warmer waters

are shown in red and orange,

colder waters in green, blue, and

purple.As the Gulf

Stream meanders northward, some

of its branches pinch off to form

large, circular eddies.

The Gulf Stream

Page 15: Monday February 25, 2013

Importance of Surface CurrentsOcean currents have a significant

influence on climate.When currents from low-latitude

regions move to higher latitudes, they transfer heat from warmer to cooler

areas on Earth.This is how the Gulf Stream keeps

Great Britain and northwestern Europe warmer during the winter than should

be expected for their latitudes.On the other hand, as cold currents

originating in cold, high-latitude regions travel toward the equator, they

tend to moderate the warm temperatures of adjacent land areas.

For example, the cool Benguela current off the western coast of southern

Africa moderates the heat along this coast.

Page 16: Monday February 25, 2013

Importance of Surface CurrentsWinds can also cause vertical water

movements.Upwelling is the rising of cold waters

from deeper layers to replace warmer surface water.

Upwelling is most characteristic along the western coasts of continents

where winds blow toward the equator and parallel to the coast.These winds combined with the

Coriolis effect cause surface waters to move away from the shore, being

replaced by cooler water “upwelling” from below.

This process brings greater concentrations of dissolved nutrients

to the ocean surface.

Page 17: Monday February 25, 2013

Deep Ocean CirculationCirculation in the deeper ocean is a response to density differences of water at varying

depths.Recall that two factors create a dense mass of water: cold water and increased salinity.

Deep-ocean circulation is referred to as thermohaline circulation.

Most water involved in deep-ocean

currents begins in high latitudes at the

surface A simplified model of ocean circulation is

similar to a conveyor belt that travels from the Atlantic Ocean, through the Indian and Pacific Oceans,

and back again

Page 18: Monday February 25, 2013

WorksheetOcean Water Circulation