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HYDROSPHERE 2
“Energy in Water”
Seamon
(WATER & SOIL)
D I S T R I B U T I O N
• 70 % of Earth’s surface is water
• 4 bya water vapor condensed into shallows
• 1 big ocean, 5 major basins
• Pacific
• Atlantic
• Indian
• Arctic
• Southern
2VIDEO How Big is the Ocean? (5:30)
3
h. Arctic i. Indian j. Pacific k. Atlantic l. Southern
a. Africa b. North America c. Europe d. Antarctica
e. Asia f. South America g. Australia
Label the oceans.
Label the continents.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
A
B
C
E
F
G
D
H
i
J
K
L
ENERGY IN
OCEANS
solvent thermohaline
solute El Nino
solution upwelling
halite NOAA
salinity
surface zone
thermocline
deep zone
current
surface current
deep ocean current
density
C H E M I S T R Y
• Water is a solvent- it dissolves solutes of
solids, liquids & gases
• Solute- substance that dissolves
• Solution- mixture of solvent and solute
http://www.chem4kids.com/files/matter_
solution.html
5
CC Video: liquids
(9 min)
• Salt: halite = 85% dissolved solids in ocean
• Salinity: measure of the amount of dissolved
salts in a liquid
WHY IS THE OCEAN SALTY?
halite
6
SALT ENTERS THE OCEAN:
• Chemical weathering of minerals from land into
oceans
• Volcanic eruptions
• Chemical reactions between new sea floor & ocean
water
WATER IS CONSTANTLY BEING EVAPORATED, BUT
SALTS REMAIN 3.6%
7
VIDEO: Why is the Ocean Salty? (1 min)
T E M P E R A T U R E
• Varies with depth & location
• Affected by solar energy
http://www.onr.navy.mil/focus/ocean/water/temp3.htm
DEPTH
8
Can sea water freeze?
• Sea water can only freeze when it
condenses such that it pushes out the salts
first to make solid H O (28.4˚F)
• floating ice insulates water below it,
preventing it all from freezing
2
http://www.acecrc.sipex.aq/access/page/index.html%3Fpage=78.html
http://science.kennesaw.edu/~jdirnber/oceanography/L
ecuturesOceanogr/LecOceanStructure/LecStructure.html
SALT
WATER
9
LOCATION- Oceans are warmer near equatorial
latitudes
SURFACE WATER:
10
TIME OF YEAR- seasons
• When the Northern Hemisphere faces away
from the sun for Winter months, those
oceans are cooler
• When N. Hemisphere points towards the sun
for Summer, those oceans are hotter
http://www.abc.net.au/science/articles/2011/01/20/3116529.htm
11
SUMMER in
N Hemisphere
WINTER in
N Hemisphere
DEPTH: Oceans get colder as you go deeper
1. Surface zone- top up to 300m, warmer and so
less dense= difficult mixing with cooler waters
below
2. Thermocline- 300-700m, temperature drops
faster here with depth; colder water is more
dense; holds more dissolved gases, slower
currents
3. Deep zone- 700m +, cold, slowest currents
TEMPERATURE ZONES
12
G L O B A L T H E R M O S T A T
Oceans create climate!
Ocean water and air temperature are always trying to
reach equilibrium (same temp)…
… But it never happens due to earth’s tilt & revolution
AIR
Temp WATER
Temp
AIR CHANGES TEMPERATURE FASTER THAN WATER13
• During summer months, ocean water absorbs solar
energy from the atmosphere, trying to reach
equilibrium with the hot air
• Before equilibrium can be reached, seasons
change- air cools for autumn
WARM WaterCOLD Water
COLD AirWARM Air
Solar
Energy
SUMMER WINTER 14
• When air changes to cooler, winter
temperatures, oceans start to release their
stored warmth to now calibrate with the cooler
air temperatures: WARM OCEAN BREEZES IN
THE WINTER…
• The opposite is true for Summer months:
Air heats up, now oceans must absorb solar
radiation to try and reach warmer equilibrium
with the hot summer air: COOLER OCEAN
BREEZES IN THE SUMMER…
15
nice vacation spot!
nice vacation spot!
FOLLOW THE
ENERGY…
Global Circulation
O C E A N C U R R E N T S
Current: movement of ocean water that follows a
regular pattern
http://paraglidinginfo.com/2014/03/03/how-the-sun-water-and-mountains-affect-wind-patterns/
17
Surface Current
Wind Driven
Deep Ocean Current
Density Driven
Gulf Stream
VIDEO: The Gulf Stream Explained (5 min)
Surface current: horizontal movements near
surface, caused by wind
• solar energy heats surface of the water
• Global winds move the surface current
• Coriolis effect: earth rotates, making water
arc instead of move in a straight line
• Continental deflections: currents can’t go
through continents!
Deep currents movement of currents deep below
the surface; Form where density increases due to
salinity & cold temperatures
21
Density-
• how close together the molecules of a
substance are or how much mass a substance
has in a given space.
Denser things are
heavier & sink
PUTTING IT TOGETHER:
THERMOHALINE
Temperature: warm water moves from the equator
towards the colder poles
Salt density: how much salt in the water determines
the density of the water; water moves from more
dense to less dense areas of concentration
Thermohaline- temperature and salt affect density &
controls movement of currents
23
G L O B A L C O N V E Y O R B E L Thttp://www.global-greenhouse-warming.com/oceans.html
24
VIDEO: Making waves: the power
of concentration gradients (5min)
Upwelling- movement of deep, cold, nutrient-
rich water to the surface
25
AN EXAMPLE:
El Nino
local wind patterns (along South America)
move local surface currents & so are replaced
by deep cold water from below
• Cold, nutrient rich water from deep ocean
rises to surface to replace warm surface
water: Iron, Nitrates
• El Nino
• La Nina
• NOAA buoys study & predict
26
WATER CYCLE
evaporation
precipitation
evapotranspiration
transpiration
condensation
precipitation
infiltration
carbon sink
weathering
deposition
28
http://www.munciesanitary.org/pollutionprevention/?print=y
Water Cycle-
1. Energy from the sun is transferred to Earth
through electromagnetic waves
2. Warm water evaporates into the atmosphere
3. The atmosphere condenses the vapor and
precipitates the water back to the surface of
Earth
4. Streams and rivers traverse the landscape
towards points of lowest elevation, eroding &
picking up minerals, becoming stored in ground
water, frozen in ice, or distributed into water
reservoirs
5. Streams and rivers carry water back to ocean.29
30
Weathering: breaking down pieces of the crust
Erosion: taking away of pieces of the crust in the
flow of water, wind, or ice
Deposition: dropping off of the sediments
31
Water drops streams rivers
Oceans
http://waterstories.nestle-waters.com/environment/collecting-dew-during-water-shortages/
VIDEO Water Cycle (6 min) OLD DISK
• Dissolved gases enter at rivers, streams,
volcanic eruptions, decay, living organisms &
through the water cycle
http://www.iceagenow.com/Ocean_Warming.htm
32
Effects of Temperature:
• Colder water dissolve gases better
• Warmer water cannot hold as many gases
(remember global warming?)
http://www.middleschoolchemistry.com/multimedia/chapt
er5/lesson6
33
• Carbon sink: ecosystem that absorbs more
carbon than it lets out-
• oceans can hold carbon in the form of
CO2 for thousands of years
34
Ocean chemistry is currently changing at
an unprecedented rate.
35
WATER & THE
LITHOSPHERE
destructive force carbonic acid
constructive force surface area
weathering
erosion
deposition
mechanical weathering
chemical weathering
ice wedging
frost action
exfoliation
hydrolysis
oxidation
Destructive Force: takes away crust
• Weathering- break down of rocks
• Erosion- carrying away of the pieces of rock by
wind, moving water, ice, and gravity
• most erosion on Earth is done by water
Constructive Force: building up of new crust
• deposition- dropping off of the eroded pieces
TYPES OF WEATHERING
• mechanical weathering- rocks are broken
down into smaller pieces WITHOUT changing
their composition
• chemical weathering- rocks break down as
minerals CHANGE in composition; become a
new substance; as by acid rain
Mass Movement
Rapid movement of Earth materials by gravity
• Landslides- large amounts of rock suddenly
break from cliff/mountain & bury
homes/villages; steep slopes; arid regions after
a heavy rain
• Avalanches- gravity pulls down huge amounts
of slow; start by vibrations
• Mudflow- slopes rich in clay receive too much
rain; esp where there is no vegetation
• Lahar- mudflow on side of a composite
volcano; ash mixes with snow/ice forming hot-
fast moving mud
landslide mudslide
avalanche lahar
Soil Creep
VERY slow downward
progression of rock and
soil down a low grade
slope; water,
temperature
change & gravity
MECHANICAL WEATHERING
Ice wedging/frost action
• water enters small cracks in the rock
• When water freezes, it expands, forcing the
crack to widen
• process repeats
until rock breaks
apart
MECHANICAL WEATHERING
Wetting & Drying
• breaks up rocks that are
made from clay
• When wet, clay expands;
shrinks when dry
• process repeats
until rock breaks
apart
MECHANICAL WEATHERING
Exfoliation
• soil and rock is removed
(glaciers or uplifting),
exposes rock found
deep underground
• This releases pressure
causing surface of rock
to expand & crack
MECHANICAL WEATHERING
Plant Roots
• Deep roots of trees
break apart rocks
Glaciers:
Erosion:
Glaciers carry rock particles to lower elevations
Deposition:
Melting glaciers
deposit boulders &
sediments called
moraines
MECHANICAL WEATHERING
CHEMICAL WEATHERING
Hydrolisis
• water (hydro)
reacts with
minerals such as
feldspar and
forms clay
CHEMICAL WEATHERING
Oxidation
• oxygen reacts
with some
minerals (esp
iron) to form rust
• occurs faster with
water
CHEMICAL WEATHERING
Carbonic acid
• carbon dioxide dissolves in water to form
this acid
• can cause minerals to dissolve, especially
those containing
calcite (remember
the seashells &
ocean acidification?)
CHEMICAL WEATHERING
Lichen & Fungi
• These organisms
decompose organic
material & chemically
weather the rock
Factors that Affect Rates of Weathering:
• Hardness- rock’s resistance to weathering
• climate-
• chemical weathering happens faster in
warm, wet climates
• mechanical weathering happens faster
in cold, dry climates
• Surface area- more surface area… more
weathering
Water and Soil: Hydrosphere 2 Energy in Water
Water and Soil: Hydrosphere 2 Energy in Water
Water and Soil: Hydrosphere 2 Energy in Water
Water and Soil: Hydrosphere 2 Energy in Water

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Water and Soil: Hydrosphere 2 Energy in Water

  • 1. HYDROSPHERE 2 “Energy in Water” Seamon (WATER & SOIL)
  • 2. D I S T R I B U T I O N • 70 % of Earth’s surface is water • 4 bya water vapor condensed into shallows • 1 big ocean, 5 major basins • Pacific • Atlantic • Indian • Arctic • Southern 2VIDEO How Big is the Ocean? (5:30)
  • 3. 3 h. Arctic i. Indian j. Pacific k. Atlantic l. Southern a. Africa b. North America c. Europe d. Antarctica e. Asia f. South America g. Australia Label the oceans. Label the continents. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 A B C E F G D H i J K L
  • 4. ENERGY IN OCEANS solvent thermohaline solute El Nino solution upwelling halite NOAA salinity surface zone thermocline deep zone current surface current deep ocean current density
  • 5. C H E M I S T R Y • Water is a solvent- it dissolves solutes of solids, liquids & gases • Solute- substance that dissolves • Solution- mixture of solvent and solute http://www.chem4kids.com/files/matter_ solution.html 5 CC Video: liquids (9 min)
  • 6. • Salt: halite = 85% dissolved solids in ocean • Salinity: measure of the amount of dissolved salts in a liquid WHY IS THE OCEAN SALTY? halite 6
  • 7. SALT ENTERS THE OCEAN: • Chemical weathering of minerals from land into oceans • Volcanic eruptions • Chemical reactions between new sea floor & ocean water WATER IS CONSTANTLY BEING EVAPORATED, BUT SALTS REMAIN 3.6% 7 VIDEO: Why is the Ocean Salty? (1 min)
  • 8. T E M P E R A T U R E • Varies with depth & location • Affected by solar energy http://www.onr.navy.mil/focus/ocean/water/temp3.htm DEPTH 8
  • 9. Can sea water freeze? • Sea water can only freeze when it condenses such that it pushes out the salts first to make solid H O (28.4˚F) • floating ice insulates water below it, preventing it all from freezing 2 http://www.acecrc.sipex.aq/access/page/index.html%3Fpage=78.html http://science.kennesaw.edu/~jdirnber/oceanography/L ecuturesOceanogr/LecOceanStructure/LecStructure.html SALT WATER 9
  • 10. LOCATION- Oceans are warmer near equatorial latitudes SURFACE WATER: 10
  • 11. TIME OF YEAR- seasons • When the Northern Hemisphere faces away from the sun for Winter months, those oceans are cooler • When N. Hemisphere points towards the sun for Summer, those oceans are hotter http://www.abc.net.au/science/articles/2011/01/20/3116529.htm 11 SUMMER in N Hemisphere WINTER in N Hemisphere
  • 12. DEPTH: Oceans get colder as you go deeper 1. Surface zone- top up to 300m, warmer and so less dense= difficult mixing with cooler waters below 2. Thermocline- 300-700m, temperature drops faster here with depth; colder water is more dense; holds more dissolved gases, slower currents 3. Deep zone- 700m +, cold, slowest currents TEMPERATURE ZONES 12
  • 13. G L O B A L T H E R M O S T A T Oceans create climate! Ocean water and air temperature are always trying to reach equilibrium (same temp)… … But it never happens due to earth’s tilt & revolution AIR Temp WATER Temp AIR CHANGES TEMPERATURE FASTER THAN WATER13
  • 14. • During summer months, ocean water absorbs solar energy from the atmosphere, trying to reach equilibrium with the hot air • Before equilibrium can be reached, seasons change- air cools for autumn WARM WaterCOLD Water COLD AirWARM Air Solar Energy SUMMER WINTER 14
  • 15. • When air changes to cooler, winter temperatures, oceans start to release their stored warmth to now calibrate with the cooler air temperatures: WARM OCEAN BREEZES IN THE WINTER… • The opposite is true for Summer months: Air heats up, now oceans must absorb solar radiation to try and reach warmer equilibrium with the hot summer air: COOLER OCEAN BREEZES IN THE SUMMER… 15 nice vacation spot! nice vacation spot!
  • 17. O C E A N C U R R E N T S Current: movement of ocean water that follows a regular pattern http://paraglidinginfo.com/2014/03/03/how-the-sun-water-and-mountains-affect-wind-patterns/ 17
  • 18. Surface Current Wind Driven Deep Ocean Current Density Driven
  • 19.
  • 20. Gulf Stream VIDEO: The Gulf Stream Explained (5 min)
  • 21. Surface current: horizontal movements near surface, caused by wind • solar energy heats surface of the water • Global winds move the surface current • Coriolis effect: earth rotates, making water arc instead of move in a straight line • Continental deflections: currents can’t go through continents! Deep currents movement of currents deep below the surface; Form where density increases due to salinity & cold temperatures 21
  • 22. Density- • how close together the molecules of a substance are or how much mass a substance has in a given space. Denser things are heavier & sink
  • 23. PUTTING IT TOGETHER: THERMOHALINE Temperature: warm water moves from the equator towards the colder poles Salt density: how much salt in the water determines the density of the water; water moves from more dense to less dense areas of concentration Thermohaline- temperature and salt affect density & controls movement of currents 23
  • 24. G L O B A L C O N V E Y O R B E L Thttp://www.global-greenhouse-warming.com/oceans.html 24 VIDEO: Making waves: the power of concentration gradients (5min)
  • 25. Upwelling- movement of deep, cold, nutrient- rich water to the surface 25
  • 26. AN EXAMPLE: El Nino local wind patterns (along South America) move local surface currents & so are replaced by deep cold water from below • Cold, nutrient rich water from deep ocean rises to surface to replace warm surface water: Iron, Nitrates • El Nino • La Nina • NOAA buoys study & predict 26
  • 29. Water Cycle- 1. Energy from the sun is transferred to Earth through electromagnetic waves 2. Warm water evaporates into the atmosphere 3. The atmosphere condenses the vapor and precipitates the water back to the surface of Earth 4. Streams and rivers traverse the landscape towards points of lowest elevation, eroding & picking up minerals, becoming stored in ground water, frozen in ice, or distributed into water reservoirs 5. Streams and rivers carry water back to ocean.29
  • 30. 30 Weathering: breaking down pieces of the crust Erosion: taking away of pieces of the crust in the flow of water, wind, or ice Deposition: dropping off of the sediments
  • 31. 31 Water drops streams rivers Oceans http://waterstories.nestle-waters.com/environment/collecting-dew-during-water-shortages/ VIDEO Water Cycle (6 min) OLD DISK
  • 32. • Dissolved gases enter at rivers, streams, volcanic eruptions, decay, living organisms & through the water cycle http://www.iceagenow.com/Ocean_Warming.htm 32
  • 33. Effects of Temperature: • Colder water dissolve gases better • Warmer water cannot hold as many gases (remember global warming?) http://www.middleschoolchemistry.com/multimedia/chapt er5/lesson6 33
  • 34. • Carbon sink: ecosystem that absorbs more carbon than it lets out- • oceans can hold carbon in the form of CO2 for thousands of years 34
  • 35. Ocean chemistry is currently changing at an unprecedented rate. 35
  • 36. WATER & THE LITHOSPHERE destructive force carbonic acid constructive force surface area weathering erosion deposition mechanical weathering chemical weathering ice wedging frost action exfoliation hydrolysis oxidation
  • 37. Destructive Force: takes away crust • Weathering- break down of rocks • Erosion- carrying away of the pieces of rock by wind, moving water, ice, and gravity • most erosion on Earth is done by water Constructive Force: building up of new crust • deposition- dropping off of the eroded pieces
  • 38. TYPES OF WEATHERING • mechanical weathering- rocks are broken down into smaller pieces WITHOUT changing their composition • chemical weathering- rocks break down as minerals CHANGE in composition; become a new substance; as by acid rain
  • 39. Mass Movement Rapid movement of Earth materials by gravity • Landslides- large amounts of rock suddenly break from cliff/mountain & bury homes/villages; steep slopes; arid regions after a heavy rain • Avalanches- gravity pulls down huge amounts of slow; start by vibrations • Mudflow- slopes rich in clay receive too much rain; esp where there is no vegetation • Lahar- mudflow on side of a composite volcano; ash mixes with snow/ice forming hot- fast moving mud
  • 41. Soil Creep VERY slow downward progression of rock and soil down a low grade slope; water, temperature change & gravity
  • 42. MECHANICAL WEATHERING Ice wedging/frost action • water enters small cracks in the rock • When water freezes, it expands, forcing the crack to widen • process repeats until rock breaks apart
  • 43.
  • 44. MECHANICAL WEATHERING Wetting & Drying • breaks up rocks that are made from clay • When wet, clay expands; shrinks when dry • process repeats until rock breaks apart
  • 45.
  • 46.
  • 47. MECHANICAL WEATHERING Exfoliation • soil and rock is removed (glaciers or uplifting), exposes rock found deep underground • This releases pressure causing surface of rock to expand & crack
  • 48.
  • 49.
  • 50. MECHANICAL WEATHERING Plant Roots • Deep roots of trees break apart rocks
  • 51.
  • 52. Glaciers: Erosion: Glaciers carry rock particles to lower elevations Deposition: Melting glaciers deposit boulders & sediments called moraines MECHANICAL WEATHERING
  • 53. CHEMICAL WEATHERING Hydrolisis • water (hydro) reacts with minerals such as feldspar and forms clay
  • 54.
  • 55. CHEMICAL WEATHERING Oxidation • oxygen reacts with some minerals (esp iron) to form rust • occurs faster with water
  • 56.
  • 57.
  • 58. CHEMICAL WEATHERING Carbonic acid • carbon dioxide dissolves in water to form this acid • can cause minerals to dissolve, especially those containing calcite (remember the seashells & ocean acidification?)
  • 59.
  • 60. CHEMICAL WEATHERING Lichen & Fungi • These organisms decompose organic material & chemically weather the rock
  • 61. Factors that Affect Rates of Weathering: • Hardness- rock’s resistance to weathering • climate- • chemical weathering happens faster in warm, wet climates • mechanical weathering happens faster in cold, dry climates • Surface area- more surface area… more weathering