Chapter 16 - The Dynamic Ocean
Ocean current
A directional movement of ocean water; surface currents result from steady winds over the ocean surface; deep ocean currents result from density variations due to temperature and salinity differences.
Surface current
A horizontal movement of ocean water that is caused by wind and that occurs at or near the ocean's surface
Neap tide
A less than average tide occurring at the first and third quarters of the moon when the sun and moon partially offset the influence of the other
How does energy move through a wave?
Circular orbital motion allows energy to move forward trough the water while the individual water particles that transmit the wave move around in a circle
tide
Daily changes in the elevation of the ocean surface
Name the three main tidal patterns
Diurnal tides, semidiurnal tides, and mixed tides
Wavelength
Horizontal distance between the crests or between the troughs of two adjacent waves
Gyres
Huge circular-moving current systems dominate he surfaces of the oceans
Why is upwelling important?
It brings greater concentrations of dissolved nutrients, such as nitrates and phosphates, to the ocean surface
What causes tides?
It is caused by the attractive forces of the Moon and Sun's gravitational fields as well as the centrifugal force due to the Earth's spin.
High latitudes
Most water involved in deep-ocean density currents begins in high latitudes at the surface
Name the main ocean gyres:
North Pacific Gyre, South Pacific Gyre, North Atlantic Gyre, South Atlantic Gyre, Indian Ocean Gyre
Denser water
Sinks and slowly spreads out beneath the surface
Tidal range
The difference in levels of ocean water at high tide and low tide
fetch
The distance that the wind has traveled across open water
Upwelling
The rising of cold water from deeper layers to replace warmer surface water.
How do surface currents develop?
They develop from friction between the ocean and the wind that blows across its surface
Density current
Vertical currents of ocean water that result from density differences among water masses
How are sediments along the shoreline moved?
Waves along the shoreline are constantly eroding, transporting, and depositing sediment
How do ocean currents affect climate?
When currents from low-latitude regions move into higher latitudes, they transfer heat from warmer to cooler areas on Earth. As cold water currents travel toward the equator, they help moderate the warm temperatures of adjacent land areas
Spring tide
When the tidal range is greatest. (full moon and new moon)
What three factors affect the characteristics of a wave?
Wind speed, length of time the wind has blown, and fetch
Erosional features
are shoreline features that originate primarily from the work of erosion
An increase in seawater density can
be caused by a decrease in temperature or an increase in salinity
How are density currents formed?
by differences in water temp and salinity
Mixed tides
characterized by a large inequality in high water heights, low water heights, or both (two high and two low tides each day but of different heights)
Diurnal tides
characterized by a single high tide and a single low tide each day
Longshore current
currents that flow parallel to the shore and move large amounts of sediment along the shore
Processes that increase water salinity
evaporation and the formation of sea ice
Semidiurnal tides
exhibits two high tides and two low tides each tidal day
From where do ocean waves obtain their energy?
from storms far out at sea over distances of several thousand kilometers
Tombolo
is a ridge of sand that connects an island to the mainland or to another island
Spit
is an elongated ridge of sand that projects from the land into the mouth of an adjacent bay
Wave refraction
is the bending of waves
Coriolis effect
is the deflection of currents away from their original course as a result of Earth's rotation
Abrasion
is the sawing and grinding action of rock fragments in the water
Why is wave refraction important
it affects the distribution of energy along the shore
Processes that decrease water salinity
precipitation, runoff from land, icebergs melting, and sea ice melting
Beach
the accumulation of sediment found along the shore of a lake or ocean
Wave period
the time between a passage of two wave crests at a fixed point
Wave height
the vertical distance from the crest of a wave to the trough