387
Ocean currents
the water in the oceans is constantly moving in great circular streams, or
currents, which can flow about as fast as you walk. Winds blow the surface layer
of the oceans to form these currents, which carry warm or cold water along the
shores of continents, greatly affecting the weather there. sometimes, currents
flow deep below the surface, moving in the opposite direction to surface
currents. For example, surface currents
carry warm water away from the equator,
while currents deep beneath the sea
bring cold water back to the equator.
Most seas have strong currents. But
the waters of the sargasso sea,
which lies in the north atlantic
Ocean, are almost still, causing the
sea to become choked with seaweed.
GulF streaM
Water heated by the sun flows out from the
Gulf of Mexico. this warm current crosses
the atlantic Ocean and flows around the
shores of western europe. there, the winter
weather is mild, while places on the other side of
the ocean away from the current are freezing cold.
Ocean hunters
Fishing boats sail the oceans and seas to
bring us the fish and other sea creatures
that we eat. the best fishing grounds are
in shallow seas, where the water teems
with fish. But catches must be controlled;
otherwise the numbers of fish will fall as
the fish fail to breed.
the Kon TiKi expeditiOn
early peoples may have used the
currents to travel across oceans. in 1947,
the Kon Tiki expedition, led by norwegian
explorer thor heyerdahl, tested this
theory by sailing a light wooden raft
from peru to the polynesian islands.
yOur Feet May Be restinG firmly on the ground, but more than
two-thirds of our planet is covered with water. Oceans and seas make
up 71 percent of earth’s surface. they influence the climate, supply us
with food, power, and valuable minerals, and provide a home for a
fascinating range of plant and animal life.
the oceans and seas began millions of years ago, when earth cooled
from its original molten state. Water vapor escaped from inside earth
in volcanic eruptions, cooled, and fell as rain. it filled vast hollows and
basins surrounding rocky land masses. these
gradually moved around to form the
continents and oceans as they exist
today. as rivers formed on the land
and flowed into the seas, they
dissolved minerals from the rocks,
387- Oceans and seas
Southern
Ocean
Indian Ocean
The Arctic Ocean is
an ice-covered ocean
at the North Pole.
the WOrld’s Oceans and seas
Oceans are vast bodies of water, usually
separating the continents. the pacific
Ocean, which is the largest and
deepest, lies between america
and asia and covers more than
a third of the globe. the
others, in order of size, are
the atlantic, indian, and
southern oceans. the
arctic Ocean lies between
the land masses around
the north pole and is
largely covered by ice.
seas, bays, and gulfs are
smaller bodies of water
that lie between arms of
land, or between islands and
land masses. some, such as the
caspian and dead seas, are
entirely surrounded by land and
are really not seas but large lakes.
tides
twice a day the
level of the seas rises
and falls. these changes in
level are called tides. they are
caused mainly by the pull of
the moon’s gravity on earth.
When the moon lies directly
over the ocean, its gravity pulls
the water toward it. Water also
rises on the opposite side of
earth, because earth itself is
pulled toward the moon.
sprinG tides
high, spring tides
occur when earth,
the sun, and the
moon are in line.
Indian
Ocean
Pacific
Ocean
North
Pacific
Ocean
Oceans and seas
Sun
The Southern Ocean
surrounds Antarctica. It
includes all the waters
between 60 degrees
south latitude and the
continent of Antarctica.
Moon
Rise in
water level
The Gulf Stream broadens
out, slows down, and
becomes the North
Atlantic Drift. A slow
current is called a drift.
NORTH
AMERICA
Gulf of
Mexico
Atlantic
Ocean
Gulf
Stream
Earth
EUROPE
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