Atmospheric Circulation & Winds
Thermohaline Circulation
Oceans & the Atmosphere
Temperature & Salinity Labs
Mixed Bag
100

Warm air at the equator ______ and cool air at the poles ______.

What is rises and sinks?

100

“Thermo” means heat, and “haline” means ______.

What is salt?

100

The ocean and atmosphere share energy mainly through ______ transfer.

What is heat?

100

In the lab, which layer should be at the bottom—cold water or warm water?

What is cold water?

100

What drives surface currents?

Wind and the Coriolis Effect.

200

What causes the Coriolis Effect?

What is Earth’s rotation?

200

Cold salty water is ______ dense than warm fresh water.

What is more?

200

How does the ocean influence coastal climates?

What is water absorbs and releases heat slowly, moderating temperatures?

200

Why did the layers mix when cold water was placed on top?

Because cold water is denser and sinks.

200

What is the main reason equatorial regions receive more heat?

Sunlight hits more directly.

300

In the Northern Hemisphere, moving air and water turn to the ______.

What is to the right or clockwise?

300

Where does deep water formation mainly occur?

What is the polar regions?

300

What major current warms the eastern U.S. and northwestern Europe?

What is the Gulf Stream?

300

In the salinity lab, why was the most saline water always at the bottom?

Because higher salinity = higher density.

300

How does upwelling support marine life?

It brings nutrient-rich water to the surface.

400

Name the three major global wind belts.

What are the Trade Winds, Westerlies, and Polar Easterlies?

400

Why does it take ~1,000 years for a parcel of water to move through the global conveyor belt?

Because it travels thousands of miles as both deep and surface currents.

400

El Niño brings ______ water and ______ weather to the eastern Pacific.

What is warm water and wetter weather?

400

Which variable—temperature or salinity—affects density more?

Trick question—both strongly affect density!

400

What event weakens trade winds and warms the eastern Pacific?

El Niño.

500

Why don’t winds move in straight lines from high to low pressure?

What is the Coriolis Effect curves their path?

500

Explain how salinity changes during sea ice formation affect circulation.

Ice forms → salt is left behind → water becomes saltier and denser → it sinks.

500

Why is the ocean considered a major “heat reservoir”?

Because it stores large amounts of solar energy in the upper layers.

500

Explain how the lab models deep-water formation in the real ocean.

Cold, salty water sinks just like in the polar oceans, starting thermohaline circulation.

500

Why would melting polar ice slow down thermohaline circulation?
 

Freshwater lowers salinity, making water less dense and reducing sinking.

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