Name______Test Date______Period______
Oceans Study Guide
1. In the spaces below, label a diagram of the ocean floor. Be sure to know the definitions too!
- Continental shelf
- Seamount
- Trench
- Mid-ocean ridge
- Abyssal plain
- Volcanic island
- Continental rise
- Continental slope
- How does a mid-ocean ridge form? What kind of plates are involved?
- What is salinity?
- How did the oceans become salty?
- The oceans are about _____% salt right now. Why do we expect the amount of sodium chloride in the oceans to increase?
- List several environmental factors that can increase/decrease salinity.
- What is the biggest challenge we have to overcome when exploring the deepest parts of the ocean?
- Use the words surface zone, thermocline, and deep zone to describe how the following change as you explore deeper below sea level. Underline the words in your answers.
- Amount of light:
- Temperature:
- Pressure:
- Compare/contrast the amount (%) of Earth’s total water that can be found in oceans with how much of Earth’s surface is covered by water.
- Because oceans formed through a very slow process of condensation, precipitation, and run-off over millions of years, what can you infer about the size of our oceans when Earth was very young?
- Name the 5 oceans and circle the largest one.
- What is the Coriolis Effect? (Need a reminder? There are 2 video clips on Ms. Tuttle’s blog)
- Describe how currents (including hurricanes) rotate differently in the N and S hemispheres due to the Coriolis Effect.
- How are surface currents and deep currents formed differently?
- How are differences in temperature and salinity related to the movement of deep currents?
- What is upwelling and how does it benefit fish near the surface?
- How do warm and cold surface currents impact the climate of land near them?
- Give an example of a current that makes the land it flows past warmer than it would be without it?
- What’s the difference between a wave and a current?
- Remember tsunamis from our plate tectonics unit? What effect do they have on water molecules?
- Describe how scientists use SONAR to map the ocean floor.
- How does the amount of direct sunlight impact the equator and poles in different ways? Draw a picture.
- Remember the floating/sinking egg demonstration? Explain why they acted differently in the containers.
- What types of environment does the sinking egg represent? (Think about what causes that level of salinity)
- When you get your oceans quiz back, be sure to study it