Oceanography
Energy
Water movement
Water Movement Cont
Waves
100

These are the 4 primary branches of Oceanography

Physical

Chemical

Biological

Geological

100

Distribution of heat creates:

seasonal patterns

winds/ocean currents

100

Vertical movement of cold nutrient rich water to the surface

Vertical movement of surface water downward in the water column

Upwelling

Downwelling

100

What does the ENSO index measure

showing the relative strength of El Nino and El nina conditions

100

True or false waves approach the shore at a perfect 90 degree angle, give reasoning for answer

false

Wave speed is proportional to the depth of water, not always same depth everywhere

Different segments of the wave crest travel at different speeds. 

200

refers to the elevation of landforms above sea level

refers to depths of landforms below sea level

topography

bathymetry

200

What happens to heat at the high and low latitudes

low latitudes: more heat gained than lost(surplus)

High latitudes: more heat lost than gained (deficit)

200

The Atlantic Ocean consists of these two large subtropical gyres

North Atlantic Gyre: rotates clockwise

South Atlantic Gyre: rotates counterclockwise

200

These are the two large subtropical gyres of the Pacific Ocean

North Pacific Subtropical Gyre

South Pacific Subtropical Gyre

200

The three factors affecting wave energy

wind speed

wind duration

fetch

300

These are the main characteristics of oceans vs seas

seas are smaller and shallower

seas are directly connected to the ocean

seas are usually enclosed by land

300

These are the requirements to create a hurricane

ocean water warmer than 25 degrees Celsius 

warm, moist air

the Coriolis effect


300

How does coastal upwelling happen

Ekman transport moves surface seawater away from the shore

Cool, nutrient rich deep water comes up to replace displaced surface waters

300

What are the problems associated with underwater turbines

Expensive

Difficult to maintain

harzard to boating

300

These are the two types of wave interferences and what they create

Constructive: In-phase wave trains (crest-crest, trough-trough) with about the same wavelengths that come together, producing waves of greater height

Destructive: Out-of-phase wave trains (crest-trough) with about the same wavelengths, resulting in a cancelling effect

400

These are the 4 ways sediment is carried to the ocean

stream

wind

glaciers

gravity

400
These are the global wind belts

Trade winds: NE trade winds and SE trade winds

Prevailing westerly wind belts

polar easterly wind belts

400

How does coastal downwelling happen

ekman transport moves surface seawater toward shore

water piles up and moves downward in water column

400

Thermohaline Circulation is driven by two abiotic factors that influence density regardless of depth

Temp: warms in equatorial regions, cools in polar regions

Salinity: Increases due to evaporation and sea ice formation, decreases due to precipitation and sea ice melting

400

What are some characteristics of Tsunamis

Long wavelengths

Behaves as shallow water waves: Encompasses entire water column, regardless of ocean depth and can pass undetected under boats in open ocean

Speed proportional to water depth: very fast in open ocean

500

These are the characteristics of the major regions of the seafloor

Continental margins: Shallow-water areas close to shore

Deep sea basins: Deep-water areas farther from land

mid ocean ridges: Submarine mountain range, rift valley / divergent plate boundary

500

What causes the Coriolis Effect

differences in the speed of rotation of the Earth at different latitudes

-To right in Northern Hemisphere
-To left in Southern Hemisphere

-what causes hurricanes to spin

500

What do surface circulation patterns depend on

Geometry of the ocean basin

pattern of major wind belts

seasonal factors

other periodic changes

500

How do deep water masses circulate?

cold surface seawater sinks at polar regions, bringing oxygen rich surface water to deep ocean

deep ocean currents then move equatorward

500

What happens as a deep water wave becomes a shallow water wave

Wave speed decreases
Wavelength decreases
Wave height increases
Wave steepness (height/wavelength) increases

M
e
n
u