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Lecture 12
Chemical & Physical Structure of the Oceans
Chapter 5: pp. 152-174
Main points of today's lecture:
- Temperature, salinity and density of the oceans.
- Dissolved gases in seawater.
- Light and sound transmission.
- The global water cycle.
Insights:
- The amount of solar energy received by the earth's
surface, insolation, varies significantly with
latitude, resulting in surface-water temperatures being
highest in the tropics and decreasing with distance from
the equator. Some factors affecting the global
distribution of surface-water temperature include seasons
and ocean currents. Temperature in the ocean varies with
depth as well, usually being coldest near the bottom and
warmest towards the surface.
- Density depends on the temperature,
salinity and pressure of seawater, the latter
affecting significantly only in the deepest parts of the
ocean. It controls the vertical structure of the water
column, with the more dense water underlying the less dense
water thus, cold saline water is more dense than warm
freshwater.
- Enormous quantities of gases are exchanged between the
ocean and the atmosphere near the sea surface. Gas
solubility increases with a decrease in either water
temperature or salinity and as pressure increases,
therefore cold slightly saline water can dissolve more
gases than warm saline water at the same
pressure.
- The intensity of light and the speed of sound vary
greatly in the ocean. Light intensity diminishes
with depth dividing the water column into a sunlit upper
layer or photic zone underlaid by a dark aphotic
zone, where plants cannot survive. Sound is
transmitted more effectively and rapidly in water than in
air, and increases as salinity, temperature and pressure
increase.
- The hydrologic cycle describes the exchange of
water in gaseous, liquid, and solid states among the
various water reservoirs. Water is evaporated from the
ocean's surface, falls as precipitation on land, and
returns to the oceans as river runoff and groundwater flow,
completing the cycle.
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Last update: March 24, 2000
http://dusk.geo.orst.edu/oceans/lec12.html