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Properties of Ocean Water. Chapter 17. How do we learn about the ocean floor?. Echo sounding – sound waves are sent down from a ship, hit the ocean floor, and return to the ship Measure the time it takes for a round trip and you can calculate the depth. Sound travels at 1500 meters per second
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Properties of Ocean Water Chapter 17
How do we learn about the ocean floor? • Echo sounding – sound waves are sent down from a ship, hit the ocean floor, and return to the ship • Measure the time it takes for a round trip and you can calculate the depth
Sound travels at 1500 meters per second Watch out for round trip times!
How do we learn about the ocean floor? • Direct Observation • Mini-submarines like Alvin • Drawback – too much time going up and down
Origin of the Oceans • Many Volcanoes Erupted. • They released gases, including water vapor. • The vapor condensed into liquid water. • The water rained from the sky and collected in large basins, forming the oceans.
Ocean Formation Water Condenses Water vapor released Rain
Salinity • Dissolved salts give ocean water a property called salinity.
Salinity • High salinity occurs: • In regions of high evaporation • In regions of low rainfall • Low salinity occurs: • Where rivers flow into oceans (Estuaries) • In regions of high rainfall • In regions with melting ice
Temperature • Only the top of the ocean is directly warmed by the sun. (Mixed Layer) • Downward to a depth of 300 m.
Temperature • Just below this surface zone, the water temperature changes rapidly. • This zone of rapid change is called a thermocline.
Temperature • Below a thermocline, most of the water is about the same cold temperature • This layer is called the “Bottom Layer”
Density • High-salinity water is more dense than low-salinity water. • Why? • Salt is heavy • Cold water is more dense than warm water. • Why? • Molecules are closer together