CH 13
CH 13
CH 13
WATER (OCEANS)
This unit deals with
• Hydrological Cycle
• Oceans — submarine relief; distribution of temperature and
salinity; movements of ocean water-waves, tides and currents
CHAPTER
WATER (OCEANS)
C
an we think of life without water? It is the ocean to land and land to ocean. The
said that the water is life. Water is an hydrological cycle describes the movement of
essential component of all life forms that water on, in, and above the earth. The water
exist over the surface of the earth. The creatures cycle has been working for billions of years
on the earth are lucky that it is a water planet, and all the life on earth depends on it. Next to
otherwise we all would have no existence. Water air, water is the most important element
is a rare commodity in our solar system. There required for the existence of life on earth. The
is no water on the sun or anywhere else in the distribution of water on earth is quite uneven.
solar system. The earth, fortunately has an
Many locations have plenty of water while
abundant supply of water on its surface. Hence,
others have very limited quantity. The
our planet is called the ‘Blue Planet’.
hydrological cycle, is the circulation of water
within the earth’s hydrosphere in different
HYDROLOGICAL CYCLE
forms i.e. the liquid, solid and the gaseous
Water is a cyclic resource. It can be used and phases. It also refers to the continuous
re-used. Water also undergoes a cycle from exchange of water between the oceans,
Table 13.1 : Water on the Earth’s surface crisis in different parts of the world — spatially
Reservoir Volume Percentage and temporally. The pollution of river waters
(Million of the Total has further aggravated the crisis. How can you
Cubic km ) intervene in improving the water quality and
augmenting the available quantity of water?
Oceans 1,370 97.25
Ice Caps 29 2.05
RELIEF OF THE OCEAN FLOOR
and Glaciers
Groundwater 9.5 0.68 The oceans are confined to the great
Lakes 0.125 0.01 depressions of the earth’s outer layer. In this
Soil Moisture 0.065 0.005 section, we shall see the nature of the ocean
Atmosphere 0.013 0.001 basins of the earth and their topography. The
Streams 0.0017 0.0001
oceans, unlike the continents, merge so
and Rivers naturally into one another that it is hard to
Biosphere 0.0006 0.00004 demarcate them. The geographers have divided
the oceanic part of the earth into four oceans,
namely the Pacific, the Atlantic, the Indian and
Table 13.2 : Components and Processes
the Arctic. The various seas, bays, gulfs and
of the Water Cycle
other inlets are parts of these four large oceans.
Components Processes A major portion of the ocean floor is found
between 3-6 km below the sea level. The ‘land’
Water storage Evaporation
in oceans Evapotranspiration under the waters of the oceans, that is, the
Sublimation ocean floor exhibits complex and varied
Water in the Condensation
features as those observed over the land
atmosphere Precipitation (Figure 13.2). The floors of the oceans are
rugged with the world’s largest mountain
Water storage in Snowmelt runoff
ice and snow to streams ranges, deepest trenches and the largest plains.
These features are formed, like those of the
Surface runoff Stream flow freshwater
storage infiltration
continents, by the factors of tectonic, volcanic
and depositional processes.
Groundwater storage Groundwater
discharge springs
Divisions of the Ocean Floors
atmosphere, landsurface and subsurface and The ocean floors can be divided into four major
the organisms. divisions: (i) the Continental Shelf; (ii) the
Table 13.1 shows distribution of water on Continental Slope; (iii) the Deep Sea Plain;
the surface of the earth. About 71 per cent of (iv) the Oceanic Deeps. Besides, these divisions
the planetary water is found in the oceans. The there are also major and minor relief features
remaining is held as freshwater in glaciers and in the ocean floors like ridges, hills, sea
icecaps, groundwater sources, lakes, soil mounts, guyots, trenches, canyons, etc.
moisture, atmosphere, streams and within life.
Nearly 59 per cent of the water that falls on Continental Shelf
land returns to the atmosphere through The continental shelf is the extended margin
evaporation from over the oceans as well as of each continent occupied by relatively
from other places. The remainder runs-off on shallow seas and gulfs. It is the shallowest part
the surface, infiltrates into the ground or a part of the ocean showing an average gradient of
of it becomes glacier (Figure 13.1). 1° or even less. The shelf typically ends at a
It is to be noted that the renewable water very steep slope, called the shelf break.
on the earth is constant while the demand is The width of the continental shelves vary
increasing tremendously. This leads to water from one ocean to another. The average width
114 FUNDAMENTALS OF PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY
Mid-Oceanic Ridges
A mid-oceanic ridge is composed of two chains
of mountains separated by a large depression.
The mountain ranges can have peaks as high
as 2,500 m and some even reach above the
ocean’s surface. Iceland, a part of the mid-
Figure 13.2 : Relief features of ocean floors Atlantic Ridge, is an example.
WATER (OCEANS) 115
warm oceanic water and it is about 500m thick hemisphere record relatively higher temperature
with temperatures ranging between 20° and than in the southern hemisphere. The highest
25° C. This layer, within the tropical region, is temperature is not recorded at the equator but
present throughout the year but in mid slightly towards north of it. The average annual
latitudes it develops only during summer. temperatures for the northern and southern
The second layer called the thermocline hemisphere are around 19° C and 16° C
layer lies below the first layer and is characterised respectively. This variation is due to the
by rapid decrease in temperature with increasing unequal distribution of land and water in the
depth. The thermocline is 500 -1,000 m thick. northern and southern hemispheres. Figure
13.4 shows the spatial pattern of surface
temperature of the oceans.
It is a well known fact that the maximum
temperature of the oceans is always at their
surfaces because they directly receive the heat
from the sun and the heat is transmitted to
the lower sections of the oceans through the
process of conduction. It results into decrease
of temperature with the increasing depth, but
the rate of decrease is not uniform throughout.
The temperature falls very rapidly up to the
depth of 200 m and thereafter, the rate of
decrease of temperature is slowed down.
SALINITY OF OCEAN WATERS
All waters in nature, whether rain water or
ocean water, contain dissolved mineral salts.
Salinity is the term used to define the total
content of dissolved salts in sea water
(Table 13.4). It is calculated as the amount of
salt (in gm) dissolved in 1,000 gm (1 kg) of
seawater. It is usually expressed as parts per
thousand (o/oo) or ppt. Salinity is an important
property of sea water. Salinity of 24.7 o/oo has
been considered as the upper limit to
Figure 13.3 : Thermocline demarcate ‘brackish water’.
Factors affecting ocean salinity are
The third layer is very cold and extends mentioned below:
upto the deep ocean floor. In the Arctic and (i) The salinity of water in the surface layer
Antartic circles, the surface water temperatures of oceans depend mainly on evaporation
are close to 0° C and so the temperature change and precipitation.
with the depth is very slight. Here, only one (ii) Surface salinity is greatly influenced in
layer of cold water exists, which extends from coastal regions by the fresh water flow
surface to deep ocean floor. from rivers, and in polar regions by the
The average temperature of surface water processes of freezing and thawing of ice.
of the oceans is about 27°C and it gradually (iii) Wind, also influences salinity of an area
decreases from the equator towards the poles. by transferring water to other areas.
The rate of decrease of temperature with (iv) The ocean currents contribute to the
increasing latitude is generally 0.5°C per salinity variations. Salinity, temperature
latitude. The average temperature is around and density of water are interrelated.
22°C at 20° latitudes, 14° C at 40° latitudes Hence, any change in the temperature or
and 0° C near poles. The oceans in the northern density influences the salinity of an area.
WATER (OCEANS) 117
records higher salinity due to high evaporation. water to ice or evaporation, or decreased by
Salinity is, however, very low in Black Sea due the input of fresh waters, such as from the
to enormous fresh water influx by rivers. See rivers. Salinity at depth is very much fixed,
the atlas to find out the rivers joining Black Sea. because there is no way that water is ‘lost’, or
The average salinity of the Indian Ocean is the salt is ‘added.’ There is a marked difference
o
35 /oo. The low salinity trend is observed in in the salinity between the surface zones and
the Bay of Bengal due to influx of river water the deep zones of the oceans. The lower salinity
by the river Ganga. On the contrary, the water rests above the higher salinity dense
Arabian Sea shows higher salinity due to high water. Salinity, generally, increases with depth
evaporation and low influx of fresh water. Figure and there is a distinct zone called the halocline,
13.5 shows the salinity of the World’s oceans. where salinity increases sharply. Other factors
being constant, increasing salinity of seawater
Vertical Distribution of Salinity causes its density to increase. High salinity
Salinity changes with depth, but the way it seawater, generally, sinks below the lower
changes depends upon the location of the sea. salinity water. This leads to stratification by
Salinity at the surface increases by the loss of salinity.
EXERCISES
Project Work
(i) Consult the atlas and show ocean floor relief on the outline of the world
map.
(ii) Identify the areas of mid oceanic ridges from the Indian Ocean.