Tải bản đầy đủ (.ppt) (37 trang)

Geography and Oceanography - Chapter 2 potx

Bạn đang xem bản rút gọn của tài liệu. Xem và tải ngay bản đầy đủ của tài liệu tại đây (2.66 MB, 37 trang )

GEO/OC 103
Exploring the Deep ….
Today’s Tune
“Pirates of the Caribbean”
Registration Problems?
Please see
Melinda Jensen
Geosciences Departmental Office
104 Wilkinson Hall

737-1238
“Water World”
“Earth is a unique
planet, possibly one of
the few in the galaxy
that has water.
Nearly 71% of it’s
surface is ocean. From
space, Earth is
brilliantly blue, white in
places with clouds and
ice, sometimes swirling
with storms.
At it’s surface the ocean
is in constant motion
with powerful currents
that stretch for
thousands of miles and
towering waves.
Beneath the ocean’s
surface lie hidden


mountain ranges, vast
trenches tens of
thousands of feet deep,
immense hot springs,
and huge volcanoes
spewing molten rock in
massive eruptions.”
T. Garrison
Chapter 1
“Just the Facts…”

Over 97% of the water on the Earth is in the
ocean.

The average depth of the ocean is about
4000
meters
.

The Mariana Trench is 11,022 m deep, the
deepest spot on the planet.

8 tons per sq. in.

Mt. Everest is “only” ~8667 m above sea level
“Just the Facts…”

Mauna Kea on the Big Island of Hawaii,
measures ~10,600 m from the ocean
floor, making it the tallest mountain on

the planet (surpassing even Mt. Everest).

If the Earth’s land surface was leveled
to a smooth ball, the ocean would cover
it to a depth of 2686 m.
“Just the Facts…”

The ocean contains some 5 trillion tons
of salts

If dried and spread evenly, that mass would
cover the entire planet to a depth of 45 m.

On a planetary scale the ocean is
insignificant.

Its average depth is a tiny fraction of the
Earth’s radius.
Why Study the Ocean?

Major influence on weather and climate

Source of food, energy, medical drugs

Transportation

Military significance

Recreational resource


Major influence on the health of the
planet

Culture and history
Historical Review
of Oceanography

Roots traced to ocean exploration.

Describing
the oceans
Historical Review
of Oceanography

The 18th century was marked by

Improvements in navigation and
mapping

Accumulation of data for charts

Temperature, currents

In the United States, Benjamin Franklin
(1769-1770) published the first chart of
the Gulf Stream
Historical Review
of Oceanography
(Cont.)


In Britain, James Cook (1768-1779)

Constructed charts of coastlines
especially for the South Pacific

Secondary
discovery the Hawaiian
Islands
Historical Review
of Oceanography
(Cont.)
Historical Review
of Oceanography
(Cont.)

In the 19th century curiosity about the
oceans increased and voyages for
scientific purposes were initiated

Charles Darwin: British naturalist

Voyage of the Beagle (1831-1836), studied
geology and biology of the South American
coastline

Developed theory of organic evolution
based on natural selection

Published
On the Origin of the Species

(1859)
$1200!
The Voyage of the HMS
Beagle
Charles Darwin
Route of the HMS Beagle

Edward Forbes: British naturalist (1815-
1854)

Proposed the hypothesis that no life (azoic)
existed in the oceans below 550 m
Historical Review
of Oceanography
(Cont.)

Matthew Fontaine Maury: U.S. naval
officer

Compiled information on winds and
currents

Published
The Physical Geography of the
Sea
(1855)

“Father of physical oceanography”
Historical Review
of Oceanography

(Cont.)

C. Wyville Thompson: British explorer

Directed the Challenger Expedition (1872-1876)

First major scientific expedition

Globe-encircling voyage

Chemical, physical, and biological measurements
and collections

Disproved Edward Forbes “azoic theory” by
collecting sea life from waters as deep as 9000 m
Historical Review
of Oceanography
(Cont.)
The
Challenger

Expedition
Modern Oceanography

Major
interdisciplinary
expeditions e.g., the
Meteor Expedition: German (1925-1927)

Bottom topography


Vertical profiles of salinity, temperature,
oxygen

Subsequent growth, World War II, urgent
need for information on the physical structure
of the oceans
What is Oceanography
Today?
Geological Oceanography
(Marine Geology)
Study of rocks and sediments & processes
responsible for their formation.
Marine Geophysics
Study of rock structure in the ocean
basin, properties of rocks such as
magnetism, occurrence of
earthquakes.
Dec 26, 2004
9.0 Eq, Sumatra
275,950 killed
Image courtesy of BBC
March 28, 2005
8.7 Eq, Sumatra
290 killed
Image courtesy of USGS

×