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Ocean Chemistry – Chapter 6

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Presentation on theme: "Ocean Chemistry – Chapter 6"— Presentation transcript:

1 Ocean Chemistry – Chapter 6
Fe2+ Ca2+ NO3-

2 OUTLINE Foundations of Chemical Oceanography
Periodic Table – Valence Electrons Water – It’s Unique Properties Dissolved Elements in SeaWater Sources & Sinks Carbon Dioxide & the WORLD Ocean

3 SeaSalt (Na+Cl-) Maio Island, Cape Verde, Africa -Nearly all minerals/ elements found in the Ocean. . ..

4 Foundations of Chemical Oceanography
Joseph Gay-Lussay ( ) Introduces the idea of the “WATER Column” Denotes depth-dependency of many ocean properties (esp. elements/minerals, e.g CaCO3 “calcite”) ALGAE Shells totally dissolve

5 “Liebig’s Law of Minimum”
What does it state? Growth of plants controlled by a single element (required by plant) - but available at LOWEST rate of supply Challenge Question In this schematic which element would be rate limiting?

6 OUTLINE Foundations of Chemical Oceanography
Periodic Table – Valence Electrons Water – It’s Unique Properties Dissolved Elements in SeaWater Sources & Sinks Carbon Dioxide & the WORLD Ocean

7 Recall - Periodic Table _Valence Electrons
Outer valence electrons (= e-) participates in bonding of Elements 6 e- = (.) e.g. CO2 carbon dioxide O::C::O ‘‘ ‘’ Covalent bond Sharing e-  O=C=O CO2 4 e- = (.)

8 OUTLINE Foundations of Chemical Oceanography
Periodic Table – Valence Electrons Water – It’s Unique Properties Dissolved Elements in SeaWater Sources & Sinks Carbon Dioxide & the WORLD Ocean

9 - - + - - - - + - - - + - - - + + + + + Water – It’s Unique Properties
: O : H H - - + O- - - H+ - - + - - - + - - O- H+ H+ - + + Electro + part attract electro – part (Opposites attract) H+ + + + H2O molecules form Hydrogen bonds with other H2O molecules. . . (see above)  what makes water  b/c of +/- nature of H2O = great at DISSOLVING substances – aka UNIVERSAL SOLVENT (something that DISSOLVES)

10 Dissolving Power of H2O Water ~ universal (solvent)
What trying to dissolve, aka = solute (e.g. salt) When too much of solute/solvent  precipitation (e.g. sugar crystals or salt) Compounds of Opposite charge molecules = “ionic compounds” – these dissolve best in H2O Anions (-) charge, e.g. Cl- Cations (+) charge, e.g. Na+

11 Salt, a solute, dissolves in water, a solvent
Until a “saturation point” is reached Challenge Question? How can this be overcome? Increase temp. . . Solute dissolves

12 Airborne particles and the World’s Ocean
Aeolian (air/wind) Input Red clay (to sediments) trace elements ~Iron (Fe2+) Rate limiting nutrient for plankton  algae bloom? With Iron comes increased Plankton blooms Plankton Blooms produce Dimethyl Sulfide (DMS)  Cloud condensation nuceli -Influences cloud formation MODIS satelite Fe2+ Fe2+ Fe2+ Fe2+ Dust from Africa . . . bloom bloom

13 OUTLINE Foundations of Chemical Oceanography
Periodic Table – Valence Electrons Water – It’s Unique Properties Dissolved Elements in SeaWater Sources & Sinks Carbon Dioxide & the WORLD Ocean

14 Dissolved Elements of SeaWater
The major constituents (elements of SeaWater)

15 Dissolved Elements in SeaWater
The major constituents (elements of SeaWater) Know the big 5 (conservative ~ lots)

16 Oceanographers Use conductivity at diff. temps To determine salinity Throughout the oceans. . . Salinity affects density  Deep water - Ocean Circulation/Currents. . .Climate To be continued. .

17 Minor Constituents of Seawater
Minor constituents (≤0.1 mMol/ kg, very dilute see Table 6.1) trace elements (Iron, Silica) (secondary metabolites – venoms, poisons) Marine Natural Products Cone Snail- Conus magnus Conotoxins (ziconotide- Prialt®) 1000Xs more potent then Morphine! morphine ziconotide

18 Biologically Important Nutrients: 2 classes:
Macronutrients Nitrogen (N) Phosphorous (P) Potassium (K) micronutrients Iron (Fe) Silica (Si) Availability & Supply of nutrients Effect photosynth in world ocean More in Chap

19 Dissolved Organic Matter (DOM)
Dissolved Carbon “C” from bacteria decomposition Leaky marine organisms (incontinent) Terrestrial sources Important in Carbon Cycle Add to Oceans Color Can be seen by satellite Helps to track/model Carbon Cycle Chp.14 CO2 – climate change

20 Dissolved Gasses - Challenge Questions
What are Zones of decreased and no dissolved Oxygen called? 1) Hypoxic Zone – decreased O2 levels 2) Anoxic Zone – no O2 !  Do gasses dissolve better with increased or decreased temperature? Decreased temperature Lots of nutrients (Missip river runoff) lead to Algae blooms - Zoo plankton - use up all O2 – ( Big fish suffocate)

21 Confirming your Knowledge
What are the 5 major elemental constituents of SeaH2O? Cl, Na, S, Mg, Ca What are the Macro and micronutrients? N (nitrogen), P (phosphorous), K (potassium) (Macro) Fe, Si (micro)

22 OUTLINE Foundations of Chemical Oceanography
Periodic Table – Valence Electrons Water – It’s Unique Properties Dissolved Elements in SeaWater Sources & Sinks Carbon Dioxide & the WORLD Ocean

23 Sources ( provide) & Sinks (remove) Minerals etc.
The above determine concentration of elements in SeaWater CONTINENTAL Weathering: A Source Na from Continental Weathering Cl- from Vents? Volcanoes? (acid rain) not f/ river rocks (recycled as spray-Ocean Waves

24 Hydrothermal Vents: A Source & SINK
Sources ( provide) & Sinks (remove) Minerals etc. Hydrothermal Vents: A Source & SINK +/- Minor source Consume other elements Lead, Sulfur, Copper, Iron, Cobalt, Ag Mostly gypsum & Zinc

25 Residence Times of Elements
When sources/ sinks in balance – ocean is steady state At steady state – can define the amt. of time For total mass of an Element (e.g. Na) to be replaced aka Residence Time (how long it is in the ocean) Residence Time = mass of element present / rate of input or removal Na 1.472 x 1011 kg yr-1 tons/ year / 2 x108 tons/yr-1 Na/year = 70 million years!

26 Final Thoughts Turn in Long Lab Field Trip (HW-1)
Please do HW-2 (due July 7th) Wed – Final Chemical Oceanography -CO2_The Oceans & Ocean Physics Fe2+ NO3- Ca2+

27 Fig. 6.16

28 Fig. 6.17

29 Page 103

30 Fig. 6.18

31 Fig. 6.19

32 Fig. 6.20

33 Fig. 6.21

34 Fig. 6.22

35 Page 109

36 PHOTOS

37 Opener

38 Page 91

39 Fig. 6.1

40 Figure 6a

41 Fig. 6.14

42 TABLES

43 Tab. 6.1

44 Tab. 6.2

45 Tab. 6.3


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