Oceanography Notes
Midterm Corrections
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Lines of latitude measure north-south with respect to the equator
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Old, cold oceanic lithosphere more dense than:
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underlying warm aesthenosphere
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continental lithosphere
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younger oceanic lithosphere
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Continental Margin order: Shelf, Slope, Rise
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Oceanic crust floats lower on mantle because it is denser
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Free oxygen produced by photosynthesis
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Evaporation is a warming process
Chapter 6
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atmosphere and ocean interdependent
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surface currents correlate with wind belts
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interchangeable results b/w ocean/atmos
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radiant energy from sun responsible for motion in atmos and ocean
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ecliptic: the plane traced by earth’s orbit
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earth tilts at 23.5%
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earth axis is always pointing in same direction, toward Polaris [N Star]
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vernal equinox: occur about 21 March, sun directly overhead along equator.
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-during this, all placed on earth experience same length night and day
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-N hemis, this is spring
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summer solstice: june 21. sun at most northerly point in sky, directly above tropic of cancer
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-at noon this day, sun seems to pause in sky.
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Tropic of cancer: 23.5 degrees N lat
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Autumnal equinox: sept 23. sun directly overhead along eq again.
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-also known as fall equinox in N hemis.
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winter solstice: dec 22. directly overhead at tropic of Capricorn
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-S hemis seasons reversed, this is when S hemis most directly facing sun. This is beginning of S hemis summer.
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tropic of Capricorn: 23.5 degrees S lat
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declination: angular distance from equatorial plane
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-sun’s declination varies b/w 23.5 degrees N and S lats on yearly cycle
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tropics: region b/w Capricorn and Cancer
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-receive greater annual radiation that poles
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N hemis: longest day-summer solstice, shortest day-winter solstice
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Exceptions to daily cycles of light and dark:
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Arctic circle: 66.5 degrees N lat
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Antarctic Circle: 66.5 degrees S lat
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-during N hemis winter, area N of arctic circle experiences 6 months darkness, area S of Antarctic circle experiences 6 months daylight
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half a year later, this situation reversed
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sunlight strikes low lat at high angle; radiation concentrated in small area
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sunlight strikes high lat at low angle; same amount of radiation spread over larger area
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atmosphere absorbs radiation, so less radiation at high lat, b/c passes through more atmosphere
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Albedo: percentage of incident radiation that is reflected back to space.
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-avg albedo of earth’s surface: 30%
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-ice has higher albedo than soil or vegetation so more radiation reflected back into space at high lats
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-angle at which sunlight strikes ocean surface determines how much absorbed and how much reflected
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-directly: 2% reflected
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-5 degree above horizon: 40% reflected
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-so, ocean reflects more radiation at high lats
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Elevation of sun above atmosphere: 90 60 30 15 5
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Reflected radiation [%] 2 3 6 20 40
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absorbed radiation [%] 98 97 94 80 60
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amount of radiation varies annually due to Earth’s seasons
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amount of radiation varies daily b/c of day and night due to rotation
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temperature difference b/w equatorial zone and poles remains the same, b/c excess heat transferred from equatorial zone to poles [circulation atmos and ocean]
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Composition of dry air:
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Nitrogen 78.1%
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Oxygen 20.9%
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Argon .9%
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CO2 .037%
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Other trace
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troposphere: surface-12km[7m]. all weather produced here. much atmospheric mixing.
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-temperature is cooler with altitude in troposphere
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air has density
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higher temperature, lower density [for air]
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convection cell: rising and sinking air moving in circular fashion
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warm air holds more water vapor because it has more contact with water vapor due to quick moving particles.
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warm air moist, cool air dry
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-warm breezy air-evaporation
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more water vapor in air=decreased density
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atmospheric pressure= 1.o atmosphere [14.7lbs/sq inch] at sea lvl
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-decreases with increasing altitude [pressure depends on weight of air column above]
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column of cool dense air: high pressure at surface; leads to sinking air
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-movement toward surface and compression
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column of warm, less dense air; low pressure at surface; leads to rising air
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-movement away from the surface and expansion
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air always moves from high to low pressure areas
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principles that drive physical movement of air remain same whether earth is spinning or not
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Coriolis Effect: changes the intended path of a moving body. Gaspard Hustave de Coriolis [1835].
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does not influence the body’s speed [not a force]
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this effect causes moving objects on earth to follow curved paths
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N hemis; object goes right
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S hemis; object goes left
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the directions right and left are the viewer’s perspective looking I the direction in which the object is traveling
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-ball thrown b/w two people will curve slightly to right in N hemis from the thrower’s point of view
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-greater effect on objects going long-distance, especially N-S
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result of earth’s eastward rotation
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the difference in the speed of Earth’s rotation at difference lats causes this effect
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maximized at poles and zero at the equator.
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merry-go-round; fall off tangent to circle
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Coriolis effect perspective; the one looking in direction object is moving
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distance that a point must travel in a day shorter with increasing lat
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1600 km/hr earth sping rate [0 at poles]
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this change in velocity w/ lat is true cause of Coriolis effect
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1400km/hr at 30 degrees lat N and S
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missile launched straight at target will curve right [to the eye], but really, that target [point on earth] has a faster or slower velocity that the launch point
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friction not taken into account; has a great effect
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rate of change of rotational velocity [per degree of lat] increases as the pole is approached from equator
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[from 200km/hr b/w eq and 30 deg N lat to 600km/hr b/w 30 deg N lat and 60 deg N lat]
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60 deg N lat- N pole -> 800km/hr difference
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max Coriolis effect at poles, no Coriolis effect at equator
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Coriolis effect summary:
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-caused by earth rotation and resulting decrease in velocity with increased latitude
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-influences all moving objects, esp those moving over large distances
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-changes only direction, not speed
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-deflection to the right in N hemis, left in S hemis
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-O at equator; increases with increasing lat; strongest at poles.
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Hadley Cells: George Hadley [1658-1768] circulation cells resulting from dry air mass at equatorial zone traveling N or S of equator at 30 deg lat becoming dense enough to sink and complete the loop
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Ferrel cell: 30deg-60deg lat. William Ferrel [1817-1891]. Invented 3-cell [er hemis model. Cell moves coinciding with adjacent cells.
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Polar cells: 60deg-90deg lat.
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subtropical highs: high rpessure cones caused by descending air at 30deg N and S lat.
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polar highs: high pressure regions caused by descending air at poles
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-both areas: warm under own weight; dry, clear, fair conditions. Not necessarily warm
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equatorial low: rising air causing a band of low pressure at the equator
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subpolar low: rising air causing a band of low pressure at 60 deg lat.
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-both areas: cloudy with much precipitation, because rising air cools and cannot hold its water vapor
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trade winds: massed of air moving from subtropical high pressure belts to equatorial low pressure belts
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-steady winds named from “to blow trade” [to blow in regular course]
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-if earth did not rotate, trade winds blow NS
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N hemis; northeast trade winds: curve to right; from NE to SW
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S hemis; southeast trade winds: curve to left; from SE to NE
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-the coriolis effect curves these winds
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prevailing westerly wind belts: some of descdending air in subtrops moves along surface to highest lat
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-SW to NE in N hemis; NW to SE in S hemis
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polar easterly wind belts: air moving away from high pressure at poles
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-Coriolis effect at poles strongly deflects winds
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-blow from: NE in N hemis, SE in S hemis.
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When polar easterlies collide with prevailing westerlies at subpolar low pressure belts [60 deg lat], the warmer, less dense air of westerlies rises above.
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doldrums: boundary between trade belts. Lack of winds here.
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Intertropical Convergence Zone [ITCZ]: doldrums. Between where trade winds converge.
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Horse latitudes: boundary between prevailing westerlies and trade winds [30 deg lat]
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-high pressure, clear, dry, fair conditions
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-air is sinking and surface winds are light and variable [not much rain]
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polar front: boundary between westerlies and easterlies [60 deg lat]
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-cloudy, much precipitation. Battelground for different air masses
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poles are cold deserts [not much precipitation]
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Ferrel 3-cell idea is only general. Other factors:
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1] tilt of earth’s rotational axis, producing seasons
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2] low heat capacity of continental rock: colder winter, hotter summer than over oceans
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3] Uneven distribution of land, particularly affecting N hemis patterns
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during winter on continent: atmospheric high pressure, summer: low pressure.
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such seasonal atmospheric pressure over Asia causes Monsoon Winds.
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Christopher Columbus: Italian navigator. Toscanelli: astronomer
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-reached canary islands Aug 3, 1942
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-called West Indies inhabitants “Indians” because he thought they were near India
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-1498; South America 1502; Central America
Chapter 6 Lecture
Solar energy creates winds
Example of interactions: El Nino, Greenhouse Effect
Theory: Earth tilt due to Mar’s affect.
35degN-35degS->heat gained
Other lats, heat lost
Heat gained moves to poles
troposphere: 60degC-50degC at min temp
Topopause-Stratosphere-Ozone layer-Mesosphere
dry air and cool air sink <-more dense
moist air and warm air rise<-less dense
-moist air less dense than dry air because water has less mass than N2+O2
high pressure->air coming down; low pressure->air rising
deserts have cool/dry air coming down
cool dense air, higher surface pressure
Chapter 6 cont…
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weather: conditions in atmosphere at given time and place
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climate: long-term average of weather
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cyclonic flow: CCW flow of air around low pressure cells as a result of Coriolis effect on air moving from high to low pressure curving it to the right [N hemis]
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anticyclonic flow: air leaving high pressure region and curves right, establishes CW flow of air around high pressure cells [N hemis]
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low pressure->clouds high pressure->sun
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winter high pressure cells replaced by summer low pressure over continents, so continental wind patterns often reverse themselves seasonally.
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land breeze: cool air sinking, blowing over ocean in early morning hours.
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-due to cool sinking air over continents at night as a results of continents having low heat capacity
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sea breeze: warm air rising, blowing cool air from ocean over continent in afternoon.
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-due to warm air rising over/above continents during day as a result of continental low heat capacity.
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Wind Belts and Boundaries:
Region
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Name
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Pressure
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Characteristics
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0-5
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Doldrums
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L
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Light variable wind. Cloudy/Precip. Hurricanes breed here
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5-30
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Trade Winds
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-
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Strong, steady winds generally from E
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30-60
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Horse Latitudes
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H
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Light, variable wind. Dry, clear, fair. Little precip. Major deserts here
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60
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Prevailing W
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-
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Winds generally from W. Brings US-influencing storms
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60-90
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Polar Front
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L
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Variable wind. Stormy/cloudy year-round
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Poles
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Polar E
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-
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Cold, dry winds generally form E
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Polar High Pressure
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H
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Variable winds. Clear, dry, fair, cold temp, min precip. Cold deserts here.
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Very high and very low lats, little daily and minor seasonal change in weather
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midlatitudes: where storms are common
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storms: atmosphere disturbances: strong wind, precip, thunder/lightning
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air masses: large volumes of air: definite area of origin, distinctive characteristics.
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-polar and tropical air masses influence US
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-most originate over sea. those from land are drier
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-US influenced more by: polar air masses in winter/tropical air masses in summer
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-[c]continental [m]maritime [T]tropical [A]arctic [P]polar
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warm front: contact between warm air mass moving into area of cold air
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-as air masses move to midlats, they move E some
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cold front: contact between cold air mass into warm-air area
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jet stream: narrow, fast, Eastward-flowing air mass. Causes fronts.
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-above mid lats just below top of troposphere, 6miles high
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-follows wavy path; causes unusual weather by steering [P] or [T] too far N or S
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warm always rises above cold
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temperature difference across cold front greater than warm front
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-so, rain of cold front usually heavier, briefer
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Tropical cyclones: huge, rotating masses of low pressure: strong wind, torrential rain
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hurricanes: name in N, S America
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typhoons: W N Pacific ocean
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cyclones: Indian ocean
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energy of single hurricane greater than all that created in US in 20 years.
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tropical cyclone begins as low pressure cells break from equatorial low pressure belt, grows as heat energy from ocean picked up
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-the surface winds feed moisture [water vapor] into storm
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-the release of vast amounts of water’s latent-heat of condensation power tropical cyclone.
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Tropical cyclone classification:
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tropical depression: winds below 38mph
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tropical storm: 38 -
tropical cyclone: 74mph -
Saffir-Simpson Scale: hurricane intensity; further classifies; wind speed, dmg
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250mph a high
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100 tropical cyclones each year. conditions to create:
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ocean water temperature > 25C -> for evaporation
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warm/moist air -> supplies latent heat
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Coriolis effect; cyclone spin CCW in N hemis, CW in S hemis
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No cyclone directly on equator, because Coriolis is zero. Happens on equator once every 300-400 years
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June 1-Nov 30 “hurricane season” [not limited to this time frame]
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hurricanes typically remain in tropics. Driven by trade winds so they move E to W. Last 5-10 days.
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If more over land, energy source is lost, so they dissipate
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diameter avg 124miles but can be 500+
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eye of the hurricane: low pressure center: air here spirals upward; usually calm
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spiral rain bands compose hurricanes; several inches of rainfall per hour
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storm surge: responsible for most of a hurricane’s dmg. [90% deaths]. Hill of water
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-low pressure center produces hill up to 40ft high.
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-hill where wind blowing shoreward climbs shallow water onto shore. Very bad at high tide.
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-dramatic increase in sea lvl at shoer
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-where onshore winds further pile water hit most severely
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Galveston Texas, 1900; 7000 dead. Category 4.
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Category 5 3x; 1935[Keys], 1969[Mississippi], 1992[Andrew FL]
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Mitch [Central America 11k dead]
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most of world’s tropical cyclone formed in water N of equator in West pacific ocean.
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1970 [Bangladesh 40ft Storm Surge killed 1 million] another in 1972; 500k dead. ’91; 200k
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ocean climate patterns run E-W, are stable. modified by ocean surface currents.
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equatorial: region spanning equator. abundance solar radiation. Major air movement upward.
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tropical: regions N/S to cancer, Capricorn. Strong trade winds. NE in N hemis, SE in S hemis. Rough seas.
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-storms gain energy here.
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subtropical: regions beyond tropics. High surface salinity. belts of high pressure. little precipitation, much evaporation. Winds weak, currents sluggish. strong boundary currents N-S, particularly along west margins.
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temperate: regions [midlats] strong westerly winds; from SW in N hemis, NW in S hemis. severe storms, heavy precip. winter esp
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subpolar: regions; extensive precip due to subpolar low. sea-iced-covered in winter, melts in summer. icebergs common, surface temp rarely greater than 41F in summer
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polar: region; temps remain at or near freezing. covered with ice, most of year. No sun in winter, all sun in summer
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sea ice: masses of frozen ice. low temp/high lat
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icebergs: break off [calve] from glaciers that originate on land
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pancake ice: forming slush into thin sheet broken by wind and waves
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ice floes: layer of ice when further freezing occurs to pancakes
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rate of ice form slows as it thickens, because top ice insulates water below
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calm water and low temp aid ice formation
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most of dissolved substances remain in water, notice. Salinity increases under ice.
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-decreases the freezing point of water
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-ice becomes ink below surface-> lower surface salinity water freezes in place
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17% decrease in overall ice extent
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accelerated melting at interior poles
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-due to shifts in N hemis atmosphere circulation patterns
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most breaking-up [calving] occurs in summer high temps
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icebergs from in Greenland narrow valleys to ocean.
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-E and W Greenland current carry bergs into N Atlantic shipping lanes
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-may take years to melt
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shelf ice: thick floating sheets of ice formed at edges of glaciers in Antarctica
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[B-15 4250 sw mile iceberg from shelf ice breaking off]
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90% icebergs mass below sea lvl
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flat tops up to 650ft high. Most below 530ft high
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Larsen ice shelf decreased by 40% since 1997
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rate of warming; .5C per decade
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Argo located Titanic 1985 Robert Ballard
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World average temp Earth and troposphere: 15c [59F]
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greenhouse effect: keeps Earth’s surface and lower atmosphere warm.
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most of sun energy that reaches earth surface: short wavelength, visible almost
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longer-wavelength infrared radiation; heat; short-wavelength energy converted to this energy when it strikes the surface.
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energy trapped in atmosphere by ozone layer
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heat budget: 100 units shortwave solar radiation reflected, absorbed, scattered by various components of Earth
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47% of solar radiation absorbed by oceans and continents
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23% absorbed by atmosphere and clouds
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20% reflected to space by backscatter, clouds, and Earth’s surface
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peak of intensity of energy of sun; .0002inch wavelength, within visible spectrum
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earth materials that absorb energy reradiate it back to space as longer wavelengths: infrared [heat. .004 inch long]
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rates of absorption and reradiation are equal
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greenhouse effect produced by heat-trapping gases trapping reradiated heat, and reradiating this heat once more.
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change of wavelength from visible to infrared is the key to understand how greenhouse effect works
74mph>
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