Plate Tectonics
Ocean Acidification
Ocean Layers and Currents
Biogeochemical Cycle and Greenhouse Effect
El Nino and Dead Zones
100

—The Earth’s crust is divided into ____ major plates which are moved in various directions.

12

100

List three ways humans increase the amount of carbon in the oceans.

Burning Fossil Fuels by driving gas powered vehicles and burning coal for power, and deforestation.
100

What are the common units of salinity?

PPT and PSU

100

What is the biogeochemical cycle?

The continuous flow of elements and compounds between organisms and the earth.

100

What is a dead zone?  Give an example.

Dead zones are hypoxic (low-oxygen) areas in the world’s oceans and lakes.

Ex. There is a dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico.


200

Describe what happens at a transform boundary and give an example of one.

Plate boundaries where plates slide past each other. 


Ex. San Andreas Fault

200

The lower the pH of a substance, the ___________ H+ ions, and the ___________ acidity

More, higher

200

What are the two primary types of ocean currents?

Surface Currents and Deep Currents

200

The Biogeochemical cycle involves what four interconnected spheres?

Atmosphere, Hydrosphere, Lithosphere, Biosphere
200

What is a key characteristic of El Nino Southern Oscillation?

Increased surface ocean temperature in the equatorial Pacific.

300

Volcanos are formed by.....(3)

Subduction

Rifting

Hotspots

300

The capture and storage of carbon is known as....

carbon sequestration

300

What are the ocean’s three layers?

Mixed or surface layer

Thermocline

Deep Ocean

300

What proof do we have of global warming? List at least 3 types of proof. 

Temperature and CO2 Data

Glaciers are melting (we have proof in pictures and measurements)

Global Sea Level Rise (Satellite and tide gauge records)


300

 Why do we care about El Nino?

During El Niño (and La Niña) years, more destructive weather events tend to occur:

  • Droughts and brush fires

  • Intense hurricanes

  • Intense tropical storms

  • Severe coastal flooding

  • Decline of some marine species (to figure out why, think about what happens during upwelling)

400

What are the three styles of convergent plate boundaries? Provide an example of each type.

-Continent-Continent Collision

      -Ex. European Alps and Himalayas

-Oceanic-Continent Collision

       -Ex. Andes

-Oceanic-Oceanic Collision

        -Ex. Mariana's Trench

400

How is marine life affected by ocean acidification? 

Sensitive ecosystems like coral reefs may decline due to change in pH and slower construction of coral exoskeletons.

Reduced abundance of small shelled organisms may cause problems for those larger species that prey upon them for food and shift food webs and reduce biodiversity. How coral reefs will survive in an era of rapidly acidifying ocean

400

What drives ocean currents?

Density gradients (differences) drive deep ocean currents

Upwelling brings cold, nutrient-rich water from the depths up to the surface

Wind is one of the primary drivers of surface currents

400

What are the effects of global warming?

  • More frequent and severe storms, heat waves, floods, and droughts

  • Drought conditions jeopardize access to clean drinking water, fuel out-of-control wildfires, and result in dust storms, extreme heat events, and flash flooding in the States.

  • Global Warming effects health through poor air quality, increase in food and airborne illnesses and disease-carrying insects.

  • Sea Level Rise effects our coastal communities and ecosystems.

  • Animals and plants have migrated to other areas due to global warming.

  • Unless greenhouse gas emissions are severely reduced, global warming could cause a quarter of land animals, birdlife and plants to become extinct.

400

How does Nitrogen get in the ocean? 

  • Nitrogen is part of the biogeochemical cycle.

  • Human activities like those in the picture  cause nitrogen to enter the water.

    • For example: agriculture, industry, and water treatment.

500

Describe how the Hawaiian island chain was formed. 

The Hawaiian Islands were formed by such a hot spot occurring in the middle of the Pacific Plate. While the hot spot itself is fixed, the plate is moving. So, as the plate moved over the hot spot, the string of islands that make up the Hawaiian Island chain were formed.

500

If Temperature or salinity increases what happens to the amount of gas seawater can absorb?

It decreases

500

List four reasons ocean currents so important?

Influence world climate and weather

Ocean navigation and transportation

Support marine life (transport mechanism, food source)

Transport of materials (both helpful and harmful) and energy to different regions and depths of the ocean

500

How does the biological pump bring carbon from the surface to bottom of the ocean?

Phytoplankton use CO2 for photosynthesis.

As phytoplankton die and decompose, the carbon in them settles to the deep ocean.

Carbon moves up the food chain as primary consumers like zooplankton eat phytoplankton

Carbon moves further up to secondary and tertiary consumers

When they die and sink to the bottom to decompose the carbon in them settles in the deep ocean.

500

 What causes plankton blooms and how do plankton blooms lead to dead zones? 

-Excess Nitrogen causes plankton blooms.

-When plankton die, the settle to the bottom and decompose.

-Bacteria use up oxygen as they decompose plankton, causes a hypoxic or anoxic environment, mobile species leave and the organisms that can't or do not leave will die off.