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Currents

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Currents. Essential Questions. What are ocean currents? What is the purpose / role of ocean currents? What is the Coriolis Effect? What are thermohaline currents? What are the major global gyres? What are the major currents affecting Atlantic Canada?. What are ocean currents?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Currents

Currents

Page 2: Currents

Essential Questions• What are ocean currents?• What is the purpose / role

of ocean currents?• What is the Coriolis Effect?• What are thermohaline

currents? • What are the major global

gyres?• What are the major currents

affecting Atlantic Canada?

Page 3: Currents

What are ocean currents?

Page 4: Currents

What is a current?• is a continuous, directed

movement of ocean water generated by the forces acting upon this mean flow, such as:– breaking waves, – wind, – Coriolis force, – Temperature,– salinity differences, and – tides caused by the gravitational

pull of the Moon and the Sun.

Page 5: Currents

What is a gyre?• Gyres are any large system

of rotating ocean currents, particularly those involved with large wind movements.

• Gyres are caused by the Coriolis Effect; planetary vorticity along with horizontal and vertical friction.

Page 6: Currents

• Complete Investigating Ocean Currents Part 1 Lab

Page 7: Currents

What is the purpose / role of ocean currents?

Page 8: Currents

Purpose…• to carry heat from place to

place in the Earth system• affects regional climates • they transport creatures

around the world and affect the water temperature in ecosystems

Page 9: Currents

Anomalies of surface currents• Ocean Eddies

– form when a bend in a surface ocean current lengthens and eventually makes a loop, which separates from the main current.

– the swirling waters last for at least a few months – Warm water eddies are sparse in marine life

because the water does not have many nutrients– Cold water eddies are usually full of nutrients and

marine life. • Upwelling

– where water from the deep sea travels up to the surface

– often happens where wind blows along a coastline– upwelling areas are full of marine life

Page 10: Currents

What is the Coriolis Effect?

Page 11: Currents

Who discovered the Coriolis Effect?

• Gustave-Gaspard Coriolis – in 1835 – he was a French engineer-

mathematician

Page 12: Currents
Page 13: Currents

Coriolis Effect explained…• The rotation of the Earth causes an

interesting phenomena on free moving objects on the Earth.

• Objects in the Northern Hemisphere are deflected to the right, while objects in the Southern Hemisphere are deflected to the left.

• The Coriolis effect, thus tries to force winds to shift towards the right or left. The Coriolis effect can at times cause winds to blow back up the pressure gradient.

Page 14: Currents

Why does this happen?

• There are two reasons for this phenomenon:– the Earth rotates eastward – the tangential velocity of a

point on the Earth is a function of latitude (the velocity is essentially zero at the poles and it attains a maximum value at the Equator)

Page 15: Currents

Analogous Example…• Thus, if a cannon were fired northward

from a point on the Equator, the projectile would land to the east of its due north path. This variation would occur because the projectile was moving eastward faster at the Equator than was its target farther north.

• Similarly, if the weapon were fired toward the Equator from the North Pole, the projectile would again land to the right of its true path. In this case, the target area would have moved eastward before the shell reached it because of its greater eastward velocity. An exactly similar displacement occurs if the projectile is fired in any direction.

Page 16: Currents

What does the Coriolis Effect affect?

• it affects the rotation of the oceanic currents

• it affects prevailing winds and the rotation of storms

Page 17: Currents

What are thermohaline currents?

Page 19: Currents

How does it work?• Thermohaline currents are driven

by density differences in the water– density depends on its temperature

(thermo) and salinity (haline)• At the earth's poles, when water

freezes, the salt doesn't necessarily freeze with it, so a large volume of dense cold, salt water is left behind.

• When this dense water sinks to the ocean floor, more water moves in to replace it, creating a current.

Page 20: Currents

• This current begins with the cold water near the North Pole and heads south between South America and Africa toward Antarctica, partly directed by the landmasses it encounters.

• In Antarctica, it gets recharged with more cold water and then splits in two directions -- one section heads to the Indian Ocean and the other to the Pacific Ocean.

• As the two sections near the equator, they warm up and rise to the surface as an upwelling.

• When they can't go any farther, the two sections loop back to the South Atlantic Ocean and finally back to the North Atlantic Ocean, where the cycle starts again.

Page 21: Currents
Page 22: Currents

Interesting details• an underwater current circles

the globe with a force 16 times as strong as all the world's rivers combined

• moves much more slowly than surface currents -- a few centimeters per second, compared to tens or hundreds of centimeters per second

Page 23: Currents

Purpose…• It is crucial to the base of the

world's food chain– it transports water around the globe,

it enriches carbon dioxide-poor, nutrient-depleted surface waters by carrying them through the ocean's deeper layers where those elements are abundant.

– nutrients and carbon dioxide from the bottom layers that are distributed through the upper layers enable the growth of algae and seaweed that ultimately support all forms of life

• also helps to regulate temperatures.

Page 24: Currents

Deep ConnectionsThe Endless Voyage Series

• http://learning.aliant.net/Player/ALC_Player.asp?ProgID=INT_ENDVOY08

• Complete the Self test after watching the video

• 27mins

Page 25: Currents

What are the major global gyres?

Page 26: Currents

Major gyres• North Atlantic Gyre • South Atlantic Gyre • Indian Ocean Gyre • North Pacific Gyre • South Pacific Gyre

Page 27: Currents

North Atlantic Gyre• located in the Atlantic

Ocean• contains the Sargasso Sea• circulates clockwise• traps man-made ocean

debris in the North Atlantic Garbage Patch

Page 28: Currents

South Atlantic Gyre• the southern branch of the

subtropical gyre in the south Atlantic

• circulates counter-clockwise

• this current allows Antarctica to maintain its huge ice sheet by keeping warm ocean waters away

• is the largest ocean current

Page 29: Currents

Indian Ocean Gyre• is located in the Indian

Ocean • circulates counter-

clockwise

Page 30: Currents

North Pacific Gyre• located in the northern Pacific

Ocean• comprises most of the northern

Pacific Ocean • circulates clockwise• is the largest ecosystem on our

planet • an accumulation of man-made

marine debris, known as the Great Pacific Garbage Patch

Page 31: Currents

South Pacific Gyre• located south of the equator

between South America and Australia

• circulates counter-clockwise

• is the Earth's biggest system of ocean currents

• it is mostly inactive and contains little marine life

Page 32: Currents
Page 33: Currents

What are the major currents affecting Atlantic Canada?

Page 34: Currents

The currents of the North Atlantic• The Gulf Stream• The North Atlantic

Current• The Irminger Current• The Labrador Current• The Greenland Current

Page 36: Currents
Page 37: Currents

The Gulf Stream• is a powerful, warm, and swift

Atlantic ocean current• it originates at the tip of Florida, and

follows the eastern coastlines of the United States and Newfoundland before crossing the Atlantic Ocean

• The Gulf Stream influences the climate of the east coast of North America from Florida to Newfoundland, and the west coast of Europe

• is also a significant potential source of renewable power generation

Page 38: Currents

The North Atlantic Current• is a powerful warm ocean

current • it continues the Gulf Stream

northeast. • West of Ireland it splits in two.

– one branch (the Canary Current) goes south

– the other continues north along the coast of northwestern Europe where it has a considerable warming influence on the climate.

Page 39: Currents

The Irminger Current• is a north Atlantic ocean

current setting westward off the southwest coast of Iceland

Page 40: Currents

The Labrador Current• is a cold current in the North Atlantic Ocean • it flows from the Arctic Ocean south along

the coast of Labrador and passes around Newfoundland, continuing south along the east coast of Nova Scotia

• It meets the warm Gulf Stream at the Grand Banks southeast of Newfoundland and again north of the Outer Banks of North Carolina. The combination of these two currents produces heavy fogs and also created one of the richest fishing grounds in the world.

• In spring and early summer, this current transports icebergs from the glaciers of Greenland southwards into the trans-Atlantic shipping lanes.

• have a cooling effect on the Canadian Atlantic provinces and coastal New England

Page 41: Currents

The Greenland Current• is a weak cold water current

that flows to the north along the west coast of Greenland