Essentials of OceanographyRevised for increased readability and streamlined for clarity, this text is designed to accompany an introductory college-level course in oceanography. This insightful, ecologically sensitive presentation of the relationship of scientific principles to ocean phenomena is made even more relevant to a new generation of teachers and students by pairing new co-author Alan Trujillo with renowned author Harold V. Thurman. *NEW - A new coauthor: - With Thurman's retirement from teaching, Alan Trujillo of Palomar College has been added as co-author for this edition. Alan's ideas and approach will help make this edition as relevant to a new generation of teachers and students as previous editions were to Thurman's contemporaries. *NEW - Changes in chapter organization: - A new Chapter 1, Introduction to Planet Earth, replaces the old Chapter 1 (History of Oceanography). The historical perspective is now included as chapter-opening feature boxes which highlight important events in oceanographic history relevant to chapter-specific material. - New placement of the chapter on plate tectonics (switched with the chapter on sea floor features) ensures that the processes of plate tectonics can be |
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Page 8
... meters 26.0 18.4 ( 12,612 feet ) Indian Ocean 3840 meters ( 12,598 feet ) 20.5 14.5 Arctic Ocean 1117 meters 3.4 2.4 World Ocean ( 3665 feet ) 3729 meters ( 12,234 feet ) 100.0 70.8 Southern Ocean or Antarctic Ocean is really the south ...
... meters 26.0 18.4 ( 12,612 feet ) Indian Ocean 3840 meters ( 12,598 feet ) 20.5 14.5 Arctic Ocean 1117 meters 3.4 2.4 World Ocean ( 3665 feet ) 3729 meters ( 12,234 feet ) 100.0 70.8 Southern Ocean or Antarctic Ocean is really the south ...
Page 9
... meters ( 12,234 feet ) Combined continents Average height 840 meters ( 2756 feet ) Extremes Deepest depth 11,022 meters ( 36,163 feet ) Challenger Deep , Mariana Trench Tallest height 8846 meters ( 29,022 feet ) Mount Everest ...
... meters ( 12,234 feet ) Combined continents Average height 840 meters ( 2756 feet ) Extremes Deepest depth 11,022 meters ( 36,163 feet ) Challenger Deep , Mariana Trench Tallest height 8846 meters ( 29,022 feet ) Mount Everest ...
Page 486
... meter 6 feet 1 cubic inch ( in3 ) 2 yards 1 cubic foot ( ft3 ) 1.83 meters 5,280 feet 1 statute mile ( mi ) 1,760 yards 1,609 meters 1.609 kilometers 0.87 nautical mile Mass 0.061 cubic inch 1,000 cubic centimeters 61 cubic inches 1.06 ...
... meter 6 feet 1 cubic inch ( in3 ) 2 yards 1 cubic foot ( ft3 ) 1.83 meters 5,280 feet 1 statute mile ( mi ) 1,760 yards 1,609 meters 1.609 kilometers 0.87 nautical mile Mass 0.061 cubic inch 1,000 cubic centimeters 61 cubic inches 1.06 ...
Contents
Rational Use of Technology? | 3 |
Some Historical Notes | 9 |
Origins | 17 |
Copyright | |
47 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
abyssal abyssal plains algae animals Antarctic areas Atlantic Ocean atmosphere beach benthic boundary called carbon caused cells centimeters coast coastal continental continents coral reefs Coriolis effect crust currents deep degrees centigrade density deposits depth diatoms dissolved Earth energy ENSO environment Equator equatorial estuary feet Figure fish flow Gulf gyres heat high tide hydrogen hydrothermal vents increase islands kilometers land latitude layer lithogenous lithosphere longshore magnetic marine mass meters mid-ocean ridge miles million moon move Northern Hemisphere nutrients occur ocean basins ocean floor ocean surface ocean water Oceanography ooze open ocean organisms oxygen Pacific Ocean particles percent Photo photosynthesis phytoplankton plankton plate tectonics polar produce pycnocline regions rock salinity sand sea floor sea level seawater sediment ship shore shoreline slope solar South species surface water temperature thermocline tidal tion transform faults tropical tsunami upwelling vapor volcanic warm water molecules wavelength waves whales wind zone