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EARTH SCIENCE Prentice Hall EARTH SCIENCE Tarbuck Lutgens 

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Presentation on theme: "EARTH SCIENCE Prentice Hall EARTH SCIENCE Tarbuck Lutgens "— Presentation transcript:

1 EARTH SCIENCE Prentice Hall EARTH SCIENCE Tarbuck Lutgens 

2 15 Chapter 15 Ocean Water and Ocean Life

3 Salinity 15.1 The Composition of Seawater  Salinity is the total amount of solid material dissolved in water.  Because the proportion of dissolved substances in seawater is such a small number, oceanographers typically express salinity in parts per thousands.  Most of the salt in seawater is sodium chloride, common table salt.

4 Salinity 15.1 The Composition of Seawater  Sources of Sea Salt Chemical weathering of rocks on the continents is one source of elements found in seawater. The second major source of elements found in seawater, is from Earth’s interior.

5 Salts in Seawater This is by mass, and not volume. The ratio of sodium chloride is 1:1 Na +1 Cl -1

6 Salinity  Processes Affecting Salinity 15.1 The Composition of Seawater Processes that decrease salinity: - Precipitation (why)

7 Salinity  Processes Affecting Salinity 15.1 The Composition of Seawater Processes that decrease salinity: - Precipitation - Sea ice melting (why)

8 Salinity  Processes Affecting Salinity 15.1 The Composition of Seawater Processes that decrease salinity: - Precipitation - Icebergs melting (why) - Sea ice melting

9 Salinity  Processes Affecting Salinity 15.1 The Composition of Seawater Processes that decrease salinity: - Precipitation - Runoff from land (why ~ short term only) - Icebergs melting - Sea ice melting

10 Salinity  Processes Affecting Salinity 15.1 The Composition of Seawater Processes that decrease salinity: - Precipitation - Runoff from land - Icebergs melting - Sea ice melting - Marine organisms use salt "parts" for shells

11 Salinity  Processes Affecting Salinity 15.1 The Composition of Seawater Processes that decrease salinity: Processes that increase salinity: - Precipitation - Runoff from land - Icebergs melting - Sea ice melting - Evaporation (why) - Marine organisms use salt "parts" for shells

12 Salinity  Processes Affecting Salinity 15.1 The Composition of Seawater Processes that decrease salinity: Processes that increase salinity: - Precipitation - Runoff from land - Icebergs melting - Sea ice melting - Evaporation - Formation of sea ice (why) - Marine organisms use salt "parts" for shells

13 Salinity  Processes Affecting Salinity 15.1 The Composition of Seawater Processes that decrease salinity: Processes that increase salinity: - Precipitation - Runoff from land - Icebergs melting - Sea ice melting - Evaporation - Formation of sea ice - Marine organisms use salt "parts" for shells

14

15 Natural Processes Affecting Salinity

16 Ocean Temperature Variation  The ocean’s surface water temperature varies with the amount of solar radiation received, which is primarily a function of latitude. 15.1 The Composition of Seawater The thermocline is the layer of ocean water between about 300 meters and 1000 meters where there is a rapid change of temperature with depth.  Temperature Variation with Depth The thermocline is a very important structure because it creates a barrier to marine life.

17 Variations in Ocean Surface Temperature Icebergs are melting, and precipitation

18 Variations in Ocean Surface Temperature Faster evaporation, and less precipitation

19 Variations in Ocean Surface Temperature Massive amounts of rain, also more evaporation, but a LOT more rain.

20 Variations in Ocean Water Temperature

21 Ocean Density Variation  Density is defined as mass per unit volume. It can be thought of as a measure of how heavy something is for its size. 15.1 The Composition of Seawater Seawater density is influenced by two main factors: salinity and temperature.  Factors Affecting Seawater Density

22 Ocean Density Variation  Density Variation with Depth 15.1 The Composition of Seawater The pycnocline is the layer of ocean water between about 300 meters and 1000 meters where there is a rapid change of density with depth.

23 Variations in Ocean Water Density

24 Ocean Layering  Oceanographers generally recognize a three-layered structure in most parts of the open ocean: a shallow surface mixed zone, a transition zone, and a deep zone. 15.1 The Composition of Seawater  Surface Layer Sun-warmed zone Zone of mixing (300-1000) Shallow (0 down to 300 ~ 450 meters)

25 Ocean Layering  Transition Layer 15.1 The Composition of Seawater  Deep Layer Constant high-density water Temperatures are just a few degrees above freezing. Sunlight never reaches this zone. Thermocline and pycnocline Between surface layer and deep zone

26 Ocean Layers Surface layer thermocline, Transition layer Botton layer


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