1 / 14

Ocean Currents

Ocean Currents. Chapter 16. Surface Currents. A current is the flow of water moving through the ocean. Surface currents (flow in the upper 1000 m) are caused by wind. . Surface Currents in the Ocean.

minowa
Télécharger la présentation

Ocean Currents

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ocean Currents Chapter 16

  2. Surface Currents • A current is the flow of water moving through the ocean. • Surface currents (flow in the upper 1000 m) are caused by wind.

  3. Surface Currents in the Ocean • Warm currents flow from the equator to the poles, and cold currents flow from the poles to the equator • Surface currents form a circular pattern called a gyre.

  4. Surface Currents in the Ocean • Gyres in the Northern Hemisphere flow clockwise, gyres in the Southern Hemisphere flow counterclockwise.

  5. Surface Currents in the Ocean • West sides of oceans have warm ocean currents that flow away from the equator. • East sides of oceans have cold ocean currents that flow to the equator.

  6. Surface Currents & Wind • The earth rotates in an easterly direction. • This makes the winds blowing toward the equator curve westward, and the winds blowing toward the poles curve eastward.

  7. Surface Currents and Winds • Trade winds drive the equatorial part of the ocean currents. • They blow from the east, towards the west. • The westerly winds drive the polar part of the ocean currents. • They blow from the west, towards the east.

  8. Surface Currents and Winds

  9. Deep Currents • Because the warm surface water and cold deep waters don’t mix, surface currents have little effect on the deep ocean water. • Deep currents are caused by density differences. • Remember, cold water is more dense than warm water!

  10. Deep Current Movement • The densest water is at the poles. • As ice forms, the salt is left behind, leading to high-salinity, dense water. • This water sinks to the deep ocean (deep water masses). • Water flows from high density to low density, and moves from the poles toward the equator.

  11. Upwelling • When wind blows parallel to a shoreline, surface currents and deep currents can mix. • The wind pushes the warm water away from the coast, and cold deep water takes its place. • This upward movement of cold water is called upwelling. • Where upwelling occurs, the water is rich with nutrients that it brings up from the ocean floor.

  12. Upwelling

  13. Shoreline Currents • A longshore current forms when waves approach a shore at an angle.

  14. Rip Currents • A rip current forms when water that is built up behind a sandbar due to a longshore current finally breaks through.

More Related