Oceanography Goal Go over the Geology Unit Test





























- Slides: 29
Oceanography Goal • Go over the Geology Unit Test. • Brainstorm about the world’s oceans. Homework none Warm-up In your science journal Create a title page for Oceanography. Then… What is the difference between an ocean and a sea? (HINT Geologically speaking, what’s at the bottom of an ocean? )
Picture of the Day M 42: Orion Nebula
Science Unit Tests Geo. 25 Ocean. 20 Evo. 15 Paleo. 10 Bot. 15 Ecol. 15
Brainstorm Questions 1. How many oceans are there? 2. How much of the earth’s surface is covered by water? 3. What percentage of the earth’s water is freshwater? 4. What percentage of the earth’s water is accessible for us to drink? 5. Why are the oceans salty?
Got Oceans? How many oceans are there? 4 #4 Arctic Ocean #2 Pacific Ocean #1 Atlantic Ocean (Pacific) #3 Indian Ocean
Got Oceans? North Pole South Pole
The World’s Oceans Largest? Pacific Smallest? Arctic Warmest? Indian Coldest? Arctic Getting larger? Shrinking? Atlantic Pacific
Brainstorm Questions 1. How many oceans are there? 2. How much of the earth’s surface is covered by water? 3. What percentage of the earth’s water is freshwater? 4. What percentage of the earth’s water is accessible to drink? 5. Why are the oceans salty?
Oceanography Go over Geology unit test Goals Test your knowledge of the oceans Homework DR 2. 1; finish map Warm-up Begin working on Oceanography Pre-Test Ø IF YOU WERE ABSENT: take a map from front counter
BRAIN POP!!!
Bodies of Water World Map Landmasses
World Map Bodies of Water Bering Sea Gulf of Alaska Baffin Bay Pacific Ocean Arctic Ocean North Hudson Labrador Sea Bay Sea Gulf of Mexico Landmasses Mediterranean Sea Caribbean Sea Atlantic Ocean Black Sea of Japan Persian Gulf Red Sea Indian Ocean Philippine Sea Coral Sea Tasman Sea Weddell Sea
Bodies of Water World Map Baffin Island Greenland Iceland Russia Canada Aleutian Islands Hawaii Landmasses Europe United States Japan India Mexico Philippines Africa Indonesia South America Australia Madagascar Antarctica New Zealand
Ocean Temperature Goal Know how the water temperature changes with the ocean depth. Homework none Warm-up Grab your new Oceanography book from the cabinet. Read about temperature zones on p. 41 and look at Figure 5. Then, in your science journal What are three temperature zones of the ocean. Describe how the temperature changes the deeper you go.
Picture of the Day On Jan. 22, 1943 in Spearfish, South Dakota, the temperature fluctuated from a frigid -4°F up to 45°F in a matter of just two minutes. That's a temperature increase of 49 degrees! But that's not the end of this wild morning weather story. After the temperature climbed all the way to 54°F at 9 a. m. , it crashed down again 58°F in 27 minutes to -4°F once again.
Veritasium The spinning tube trick
Bodies of Water Sea any large body of salt water, smaller than an ocean, partly or entirely enclosed by land Gulf a large bay; an arm of an ocean or sea extending into the land Bay part of a sea or lake extending into the land Estuary a broad mouth of a river into which the tide flows
Bodies of Water World Map Landmasses
World Map Bodies of Water Bering Sea Gulf of Alaska Baffin Bay Pacific Ocean Arctic Ocean North Hudson Labrador Sea Bay Sea Gulf of Mexico Landmasses Mediterranean Sea Caribbean Sea Atlantic Ocean Black Sea of Japan Persian Gulf Red Sea Indian Ocean Philippine Sea Coral Sea Tasman Sea Weddell Sea
Bodies of Water World Map Baffin Island Greenland Iceland Russia Canada Aleutian Islands Hawaii Landmasses Europe United States Japan India Mexico Philippines Africa Indonesia South America Australia Madagascar Antarctica New Zealand
Bodies of Water World Map Landmasses
Geography Review Baffin M Island Greenland Canada C Aleutian R Islands Hawaii S S L Landmasses Iceland K Russia G F Europe United A States Mexico D D Japan P India N E Africa Philippines T Indonesia O South B America Madagascar Q Antarctica H Australia J New I Zealand
Geography Review Bodies of Water Bering E Gulf of Sea S Alaska Baffin U Bay North Hudson I T G Labrador Sea Bay Sea Gulf of Q Mexico Pacific A Ocean Arctic Ocean D H Mediterranean Sea Caribbean Sea F Atlantic B Ocean Black K Sea of Japan P Persian R Gulf Red J Sea Indian C Ocean Philippine N Sea Coral L Sea Tasman M Sea Weddell Sea O
Word Bank Bodies of Water: Pacific Ocean, Caribbean Sea, Mediterranean Sea, Coral Sea, Philippine Sea, Arctic Ocean, Tasman Sea, Black Sea, Atlantic Ocean, North Sea, Indian Ocean, Red Sea, Bering Sea, Labrador Sea, Persian Gulf, Sea of Japan, Gulf of Mexico, Baffin Bay, Gulf of Alaska, Hudson Bay, Weddell Sea Landmasses: Russia, Iceland, Indonesia, Greenland, Japan, Baffin Island, Africa, Australia, India, Mexico, South America, New Zealand, Europe, Hawaii, Canada, Antarctica, United States, Madagascar, Aleutian Islands, Philippines
Temperature (°C) Temp. Data 1) How does temperature change with depth? 2) What is thermocline? Click HERE to access Excel spreadsheet.
What are these numbers? World Map
Latitude So what does “high latitude” mean? “Mid latitude”? “Low latitude”?