Mid term
The Principle of Constant Proportions
although the concentrations may vary, the relative proportions of these salts remain very consistent worldwide
Oxygen enters seawater mainly:
as a byproduct of photosynthesis
Salt water freezes at a ___________ then fresh water.
at a lower temperature than
What are Counter-currents
currents that flow against the wind
thermostatic properties of water
The properties that act to moderate change in temperature. For instance: Water has a very high heat capacity therefore its temperature will not increase even if a large amount of heat is added
atmospheric convection
Warm moist air rising over cold dry air resulting in a convection current in the atmosphere,
Thermohaline circulation
a worldwide system of ocean currents in which warmer, fresher water moves along the surface and colder, saltier water moves deep beneath the surface
The major source of carbon dioxide in seawater is:
from the respiration of marine animals and other organisms
The most abundant gaseous components of the Earth's atmosphere are: A) carbon dioxide and oxygen. B) nitrogen and hydrogen. C) nitrogen and carbon dioxide. D) oxygen and carbon dioxide. E) nitrogen and oxygen.
nitrogen and oxygen.
Residence time is:
the average length of time an element spends in the ocean.
Ferrell cells
the middle atmospheric circulation cell in each hemisphere. air in these cells rises at 60 latitude and falls at 30 latitude
Upwelling
the movement of deep, cold, and nutrient-rich water to the surface
The upper sunlit layer of the ocean is called:
the photic zone
Radiometric dating
the process of measuring the absolute age of geologic material by measuring the concentrations of radioactive isotopes and their decay products
Hadley cells
"A large-scale atmospheric convection cell in which air rises at the equator and sinks at medium latitudes, about 30 degrees north or south"
Surface ocean circulation
- wind driven - ocean currents travel at 90 degrees to wind direction - dominated by subtropical gyres
Ocean stratification
-surface water float over cold, dense deep water -different densities mean little mixing between the two layers -nutrient rich deep waters don't mix with nutrient poor surface waters. -but light availability limits photosynthesis to only the surface waters
types of plate boundaries
1)convergent: plates collide, come together: lithosphere destroyed 2)divergent:plates seperate: lithosphere created 3)transform: plates slide hoizontally past each other: lithosphere is neither created nor destroyed
haloclines
A zone in which the ocean's salinity increases rapidly with increasing depth
What is the approximate mixing time of the world ocean? A) About 1,600 years. B) About 100,000 years. C) About 100,000,000 years. D) About 1 billion years. E) It has never been fully mixed.
About 1,600 years.
Active vs. passive margins
Active: narrow shelf, tectonically active Passive: broad shelf, tectonically inactive
Which of the following statements best describes the conservative constituents of seawater?
Conservative constituents, which include salinity, change very slowly.
driving forces of plate tectonics
Convection Heat rises from the core and that causes the plates to shift and move about
The Earth's rotation influences currents by a force (or acceleration, to be correct) known as:
Coriolis effect.
what are Undercurrents and counter- currents
Countercurrents: A current flowing in an opposite direction to another. Undercurrents: A current of water below the surface, moving in a different direction from any surface current
pycnoclines
Depth zone within which seawater density changes.
What is a Gyre
Large scale circular system of currents caused by interacting forces (wind, gravity, Coriolis force)
Major ocean currents
North Pacific Drift, Kuroshio Current, Oyashio Current, Humboldt Current, West Wind Drift, Bengula Current, Gulf Stream, Labrador Current, North Atlantic Drift
Active vs. passive margins
Passive Continental Margin: Oceanic crust and continental crust part of same tectonic plate (no volcanoes or earthquakes) Active margins: Three possible types of Active Margins, all at convergent plate boundaries o Ocean-Ocean Convergence (older crust is subducted - new crust is hot and buoyant, the older is more dense). Example: Japan o Ocean-Continent Convergence (oceanic crust is subducted). Example: Andes Mountains o Continent-Continent Convergence (neither crust is subducted, they just collide - mountains go up). Example: Himalayan Mountains
isostasy
The balancing of the downward force of the crust and the upward force of the mantle.
The Coriolis Effect
The way in which the rotation of the earth bends the path of winds, sea currents, and objects that fly through different latitudes
climate conveyor
Thermohaline circulation
A system of four currents completing a flow circuit around the periphery of an ocean basin is collectively called:
gyre
geostrophic gyres
gyres in balance between the pressure gradient and the Coriolis effect
The ocean is a "steady-state" system in regard to salinity which means that salinity is: A) increasing due to evaporation as the Earth warms up. B) decreasing due to several years of excessive rainfall. C) increasing due to pollution. D) in equilibrium, with dissolved components entering equal to dissolved components leaving.
in equilibrium, with dissolved components entering equal to dissolved components leaving.
Heat capacity of water
is 3 times that of land. Sunlight penetrates water. Constant mixing, due to waves. Maritime locations generally have longer seasonal lag.
Once an element or dissolved substance reaches the ocean
it may stay or be removed depending on the individual chemistry of the element
Thermoclines
narrow layers of fast temperature change that separate a warm upper layer of water and cold deeper waters
If you were standing on top of a high mid-Pacific island at 15º north latitude, from which direction would you expect the wind to come? (Hint: don't forget to consider the Coriolis effect!)
northeast
Ekman transport
results from Coriolis effect--surface ocean water moves into a spiral through the surface layers resulting in a net transpot of water to the right of the wind in the northern hemisphere, and to the left of the wind in the southern hemisphere
Sediment accumulation
sediment protected from erosion and accumulates layer by layer
Other than the hydrogen and oxygen atoms themselves, the two most abundant elements (ions) dissolved in seawater are:
sodium and chloride.
The property of water that accounts for the ability of liquid water to absorb heat and change only very little in temperature is called:
specific heat or heat capacity.
Magnetic striping
the stripes on the rocks on the ocean floor hold a record of reversals in Earth's magnetic field. the rocks contain iron. rock began as molten material that cooled and hardened, as rock cooled the iron bits inside lined up in the direction of the Earth's magnetic poles. This locked the iron bits in place giving the rocks a permanent "magnetic memory". Scientists found that stripes of rock that formed when earth's magnetic field pointed north alternate with the stripes of rock that formed when the magnetic field pointed south.
The most pronounced thermoclines exist in: A) the temperate zones B) the polar regions C) the tropics D) anywhere - it depends on salinity E) anywhere - it depends on water clarity
the temperate zones
CFCs (chlorinated fluorocarbons) are used to trace the movement of ocean currents because:
they readily dissolve in ocean water, are easily transported by ocean currents, are long-lived, and can be detected in very small quantities.
The Coriolis effect causes objects moving in the northern hemisphere to veer off course:
to the right, or clockwise when viewed from above
The dependable surface winds of the Earth centered at about 15º north and south latitudes are called:
trade winds
Polar cells
where polar air sinks and flows away from the poles downward meeting the ferrel cells at 60 degrees latitude