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Ocean Currents, Gyres & Exercises

🎓 Class 11 Social Science CBSE Theory Ch 13 — Movements of Ocean Water ⏱ ~28 min
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13.4 Ocean Currents — Rivers Inside the Sea

Imagine a river that has no banks, that travels for ten thousand kilometres, and that carries enough warm water past Iceland to keep northern Europe ice-free in winter. That is the Gulf Stream. The world ocean is criss-crossed by such river-like flows, called ocean currents?. They represent a regular volume of water moving in a definite path and direction, sometimes for years on end, redistributing heat, nutrients and organisms across the planet's surface. While waves carry only energy and tides only rise-and-fall, currents carry real water across vast distances — and they are largely responsible for the great climatic differences between coasts that lie on the same latitude.

📖 Definition — Ocean Current
An ocean current is the continuous, river-like flow of a huge volume of ocean water in a definite path and direction. Unlike waves (which transport energy) or tides (which produce vertical rise-and-fall), currents transport actual water over thousands of kilometres. They are influenced by two kinds of forces — primary forces that initiate motion, and secondary forces that shape the resulting flow.

Primary Forces — What Starts a Current

Four primary forces initiate the movement of ocean water — heating by solar energy, wind, gravity and the Coriolis? force.

  1. Heating by solar energy — Solar radiation makes water expand. Near the equator the ocean surface stands about 8 cm higher than in the middle latitudes. This sets up a very slight slope, and water tends to flow down the slope toward higher latitudes.
  2. Wind — Wind blowing across the surface drags the water along through friction. Persistent global wind systems (trade winds, westerlies) leave a clear surface signature on the oceans.
  3. Gravity — Gravity pulls the water down the surface "pile" created by solar heating, creating the gradient down which water flows.
  4. Coriolis force — The Coriolis force intervenes and causes the moving water to deflect to the right in the Northern Hemisphere and to the left in the Southern Hemisphere. These large accumulations of water and the flow around them are called gyres? — they produce the great circular currents of every ocean basin.

Secondary Forces — Density, Temperature and Salinity

Differences in water density also affect the vertical movement of ocean currents. Water with high salinity is denser than water with low salinity; cold water is denser than warm water. Denser water tends to sink, while relatively lighter water tends to rise.

Cold-water ocean currents occur when the cold water at the poles sinks and slowly moves towards the equator along the deep sea floor. Warm-water currents travel out from the equator along the surface, flowing towards the poles to replace the sinking cold water. The whole loop is called the thermohaline circulation — the ocean's "great conveyor belt" — and a single drop of water may take a thousand years to complete one full circuit.

📐 Drift, Speed and Strength of Currents
Ocean currents are referred to by their drift. A current is usually strongest at the surface (sometimes more than 5 knots) and decreases in speed with depth — at deep levels currents are typically slower than 0.5 knot. Most surface currents have speeds less than 5 knots. Drift is measured in knots; the strength of a current refers to its speed — a fast current is "strong".

Surface vs Deep-Water Currents

Ocean currents may be classified by depth:

🌊
Surface Currents
About 10% of all ocean water — the upper 400 m. Driven mainly by wind, modified by Coriolis. The named "rivers in the ocean" of school maps belong here.
⬇️
Deep-Water Currents
The other 90% of the ocean. Driven by density (temperature + salinity). Sink at high latitudes where the water is cold and dense; flow slowly along the deep basins.

Ocean currents may also be classified by temperature:

❄️
Cold Currents
Bring cold water into warm-water areas. Usually found on the west coasts of continents in low and middle latitudes (true in both hemispheres) and on the east coasts in higher latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere.
🔥
Warm Currents
Bring warm water into cold-water areas. Usually observed on the east coasts of continents in low and middle latitudes (true in both hemispheres). In the Northern Hemisphere, also on the west coasts of continents in high latitudes.

13.5 Major Ocean Currents of the World

Major ocean currents are greatly influenced by the stresses exerted by the prevailing winds and the Coriolis force. The pattern of oceanic circulation roughly corresponds to the Earth's atmospheric circulation pattern. The air circulation over the oceans in the middle latitudes is mainly anticyclonic (more pronounced in the Southern Hemisphere than in the Northern), and the oceanic circulation pattern follows this anticyclonic shape — clockwise gyres in the North, anti-clockwise gyres in the South. At higher latitudes, where the wind flow is mostly cyclonic, the oceanic circulation follows that pattern instead. In regions of pronounced monsoonal flow, the monsoon winds reverse the currents seasonally — most dramatically in the northern Indian Ocean.

🌍 The Heat-Transport Role of Currents
Oceanic circulation transports heat from one latitude belt to another in much the same way the atmosphere does. The cold waters of the Arctic and Antarctic circles move towards warmer water in the tropical and equatorial regions; the warm waters of the lower latitudes move polewards. Together the ocean and atmosphere keep the tropics from over-heating and the poles from over-freezing.

World Ocean Currents — Major Warm and Cold Currents

N. AMERICA S. AMERICA EUROPE AFRICA ASIA AUSTRALIA ANTARCTICA Gulf Stream N. Atl. Drift Brazil Kuroshio N. Equatorial (warm) E.Australian Agulhas Labrador California Peru-Humboldt Canary Benguela West Wind Drift (Antarctic Circumpolar Current) Oyashio World Ocean Currents — Schematic Warm Cold
LET'S LIST & MAP — Currents of Pacific, Atlantic and Indian Oceans
L3 Apply

NCERT activity: "Prepare a list of currents which are found in the Pacific, Atlantic and Indian Oceans." Make a three-column table grouping the major warm (red) and cold (blue) currents shown on Figure 13.3.

Pacific OceanAtlantic OceanIndian Ocean
Warm: Kuroshio, North Pacific, Alaska, North Equatorial, South Equatorial, East Australian, Counter-EquatorialWarm: Gulf Stream, North Atlantic Drift, North Equatorial, South Equatorial, Brazil, Norwegian, Irminger, GuineaWarm: South-West Monsoon Current (summer), Mozambique, Agulhas, South Equatorial
Cold: California, Peru-Humboldt, Oyashio, Antarctic Circumpolar (West Wind Drift)Cold: Labrador, Canary, Benguela, Falkland, East Greenland, Antarctic CircumpolarCold: Western Australian, Somali (during S-W monsoon — cold upwelling), N-E Monsoon Current (winter)

Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Ocean Currents

Atlantic Ocean. The North Atlantic shows a classic clockwise gyre: the warm North Equatorial flows westward, becomes the Gulf Stream off Florida, crosses the Atlantic as the North Atlantic Drift, then returns south as the cold Canary Current. The South Atlantic mirrors this with an anti-clockwise gyre: South Equatorial → Brazil (warm) → West Wind Drift → Benguela (cold).

Pacific Ocean. The North Pacific gyre is again clockwise: North Equatorial → Kuroshio (warm, the Pacific equivalent of the Gulf Stream) → North Pacific → California (cold) returning south. The South Pacific is anti-clockwise: South Equatorial → East Australian (warm) → West Wind Drift → Peru-Humboldt (cold), the cold current along the Chilean coast that supports one of the world's richest fisheries.

Indian Ocean. North of the equator the Indian Ocean is unique because it is landlocked to the north and dominated by monsoon winds? that reverse seasonally. In winter the North-East Monsoon Current flows from north-east to south-west; in summer it reverses to become the South-West Monsoon Current flowing from south-west to north-east. South of the equator the Indian Ocean has a normal anti-clockwise gyre — South Equatorial → Mozambique/Agulhas (warm) → West Wind Drift → Western Australian (cold).

🇮🇳 Why Indian Ocean Currents Are Special
In the Atlantic and Pacific, the directions of the major currents do not change much through the year. In the northern Indian Ocean, the currents reverse with the monsoon. The Somali Current along the East African coast, for example, can flow north in summer and south in winter — a fact that ancient Arab traders exploited to sail from Aden to Calicut on the south-west monsoon and home again on the north-east monsoon. The same wind reversal that gives India her two seasons gives the Indian Ocean its unique seasonal currents.
Major warm and cold currents grouped by ocean and continental coast
Ocean / CoastWarm CurrentsCold Currents
North Atlantic — east coast of N. America & W. EuropeGulf Stream, North Atlantic Drift, NorwegianLabrador, Canary, East Greenland
South Atlantic — east coast of S. America & W. AfricaBrazil, GuineaBenguela, Falkland
North Pacific — east coast of Asia & west coast of N. AmericaKuroshio, North Pacific, AlaskaOyashio, California
South Pacific — east coast of Australia & west coast of S. AmericaEast AustralianPeru-Humboldt
Indian OceanMozambique, Agulhas, S-W Monsoon (summer)Western Australian, N-E Monsoon (winter), Somali (summer upwelling)
Southern Ocean (around Antarctica)West Wind Drift / Antarctic Circumpolar Current

A Subtropical Gyre — Why Currents Form Closed Circles

North Atlantic Subtropical Gyre — Clockwise N. AMERICA EURASIA + AFRICA Gulf Stream N. Atl. Drift Canary N. Equatorial ← TRADE WINDS (push water westward) WESTERLIES (push water eastward) → Coriolis force deflects water to the right in N. Hemisphere → clockwise gyre

13.6 Effects of Ocean Currents — Climate, Fisheries, Weather

Ocean currents have a number of direct and indirect influences on human activities. They moderate coastal temperature, shape the world's fishing grounds, modify rainfall patterns and affect navigation routes.

(i) Climate Moderation

The west coasts of continents in tropical and subtropical latitudes (except very close to the equator) are bordered by cool waters — California Current off California, Canary off Morocco, Peru-Humboldt off Peru, Benguela off Namibia. Their average temperatures are relatively low with a narrow diurnal and annual range. There is fog, but generally the areas are arid — these are the great west-coast deserts (Atacama, Namib, Sahara reaching the Atlantic, the deserts of Baja California and Western Australia).

The west coasts of continents in middle and higher latitudes, by contrast, are bordered by warm waters — the North Atlantic Drift off Britain and Norway, for example. These coasts have a distinct marine climate: cool summers, mild winters, and a narrow annual range of temperatures. The North Atlantic Drift is the reason London at 51° N has milder winters than Toronto at 43° N — the warm Atlantic water keeps western Europe ice-free far above the Arctic Circle.

Warm currents flow parallel to the east coasts of continents in tropical and subtropical latitudes — Gulf Stream, Brazil, Kuroshio, East Australian, Mozambique. This results in warm and rainy climates; these areas lie in the western margins of the subtropical anti-cyclones and have abundant moisture.

(ii) Fisheries — The World's Best Fishing Grounds

🐟 Where Warm and Cold Currents Mix — That Is Where Fish Are
The mixing of warm and cold currents helps to replenish the oxygen and favour the growth of planktons, the primary food for fish. The best fishing grounds of the world exist mainly in these mixing zones — the Grand Banks off Newfoundland (where Gulf Stream meets Labrador), the North Sea, the Japanese sea (where Kuroshio meets Oyashio), and the Peru-Humboldt waters off South America. Upwelling? of cold deep water along these coasts brings nutrients to the surface, sustaining vast schools of anchovy, sardine, mackerel and tuna.

(iii) Weather, Fog and Rainfall

Cold currents passing close to a warm coast cool the air above them, condensing moisture into persistent fogs — the famous fogs of San Francisco (California Current), the Atacama coast (Peru-Humboldt) and the Newfoundland Banks (Labrador). When warm currents meet cold air, the warm moist air rises and condenses, producing rainfall — the western coasts of continents in middle latitudes are wet because of warm currents (e.g. western Europe).

(iv) Navigation

For centuries, mariners have used currents as their power. The Gulf Stream gave a 5-knot push to ships sailing from the Caribbean to Europe. Indian Ocean traders sailed with the south-west monsoon current in summer and home again with the north-east monsoon current in winter. Even today, container ships save fuel by routing along favourable currents — and pollutants and floating debris ride the same gyres, accumulating in the great mid-ocean garbage patches at the centres of subtropical gyres.

🌡️ El Niño and La Niña — When Currents Misbehave
The Peru-Humboldt cold current normally hugs the western coast of South America. Every few years it weakens, allowing warm equatorial water to spread south — a phenomenon called El Niño?. The cold-water fishery collapses; rainfall doubles in the deserts; the Indian summer monsoon often weakens. The opposite phase, when the cold current strengthens, is La Niña? — usually correlated with above-average Indian monsoon rainfall. These are the most powerful current-driven climate switches on the planet.

Surface Current Speed vs Latitude — Schematic Profile

Western boundary currents (Gulf Stream, Kuroshio) reach 5+ knots; eastern boundary currents (California, Canary) and equatorial drifts are slower. Speed decreases sharply with depth.

DISCUSS — Why Are Some Currents Warm and Some Cold?
L4 Analyse

NCERT Project: "Take a globe and a map showing the currents of the oceans. Discuss why certain currents are warm or cold and why they deflect in certain places." Pair up; explain to your partner why the Gulf Stream is warm but the Labrador Current is cold even though both flow along the eastern margins of North America.

Currents are warm when they flow from the equator towards the poles — they carry water that has been heated in tropical latitudes. The Gulf Stream begins as the warm North Equatorial Current; pushed by trade winds and deflected by Coriolis, it becomes a strong, warm jet flowing northeastwards along the east coast of N. America. Currents are cold when they flow from the poles towards the equator — they carry water that has been chilled at high latitudes. The Labrador Current starts in the Arctic Ocean and flows south along the coast of Labrador, cooling Newfoundland and producing the famous fog of the Grand Banks. The deflection happens because Coriolis force pushes moving water to the right in the Northern Hemisphere — so the gyre rotates clockwise, with warm water on its western edge and cold water on its eastern edge.

🎯 Competency-Based Questions — Ocean Currents

Case Stem. A geography student compares two coastal cities at 50° N: Manchester (UK) and Goose Bay (eastern Canada). Manchester has mild winters (3–5° C average) and rainy weather year-round. Goose Bay has bitter winters (−15° C) with heavy ice on the bay until June. The student also notes that the world's best fisheries lie just offshore of Goose Bay. Use this scenario to answer Q1–Q4.
Q1. The contrast between Manchester's mild winter and Goose Bay's bitter winter — at the same latitude — is best explained by —
L3 Apply
  • (a) Manchester is at higher altitude
  • (b) The warm North Atlantic Drift bathes Manchester; the cold Labrador Current bathes Goose Bay
  • (c) Manchester has a stronger ozone layer
  • (d) Coriolis force is stronger over Canada
Answer: (b). Manchester sits at the northeast end of the warm North Atlantic Drift (continuation of the Gulf Stream); the Atlantic water moderates the climate. Goose Bay receives cold Arctic water through the Labrador Current; sea ice and bitter air masses dominate. Same latitude, completely different ocean — completely different climate.
Q2. The world-class fisheries off Goose Bay (Grand Banks) exist because —
L4 Analyse
Warm and cold currents converge here. The cold Labrador Current meets the warm Gulf Stream/North Atlantic Drift just east of Newfoundland. Mixing replenishes oxygen and triggers the growth of planktons — the base of the marine food chain. Cod, mackerel and herring gather in immense schools to feed on the plankton. NCERT explicitly states that "the best fishing grounds of the world exist mainly in these mixing zones".
Q3. If a tropical storm pushes the warm Gulf Stream further north for several weeks, what would the immediate effect on Manchester's weather likely be?
L5 Evaluate
Warmer air, more humidity, more rain. A stronger and warmer current next to the British coast would increase evaporation, raise the dew point and warm the air masses moving onshore. Westerly winds carrying this warmer, more humid air would deliver more rainfall to Manchester. Conversely, if the warm current weakened (as during some El Niño-type Atlantic anomalies), Manchester would record colder, drier winters — the climate of N.W. Europe is very sensitive to small changes in current strength.
HOT Q. Design a 4-step climatic chain explaining how the cold Peru-Humboldt Current produces the world's driest desert (the Atacama) on the west coast of South America. Identify the role of currents, fog, descending air and lack of moisture in turn.
L6 Create
Hint: (1) The Peru-Humboldt Current carries cold Antarctic water along the western coast of South America. (2) Air over the cold sea is cooled and stable; condensation produces persistent coastal fog (the camanchaca) but very little rain because the air is too stable to rise. (3) The South Pacific subtropical anticyclone causes descending air over the coast, suppressing cloud development further. (4) Net result: the cold current + descending air + offshore winds prevent any moisture from reaching the land — the Atacama receives less than 1 mm of rain a year in some places. The same chain explains the Namib (Benguela), Kalahari and Western Australian deserts. Cold west-coast currents in low latitudes are great desert-makers.
⚖️ Assertion–Reason Questions — Class 11
Options:
(A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
(B) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A.
(C) A is true, but R is false.
(D) A is false, but R is true.
Assertion (A): Major surface currents of the North Atlantic and the North Pacific flow in clockwise circles (gyres).
Reason (R): The Coriolis force deflects moving water to the right in the Northern Hemisphere; combined with the prevailing trade winds and westerlies, this produces a clockwise circulation in subtropical gyres.
Answer: (A) — Both true and R is the correct explanation. In the Southern Hemisphere the same logic gives anti-clockwise gyres, because Coriolis deflects water to the left.
Assertion (A): The richest commercial fishing grounds of the world lie where warm and cold ocean currents meet.
Reason (R): The mixing of warm and cold currents replenishes the oxygen and favours the growth of plankton, the primary food for fish.
Answer: (A) — Both statements are true and R is the correct explanation. The Grand Banks (Gulf Stream + Labrador), the Japanese fishery (Kuroshio + Oyashio) and the North Sea (North Atlantic Drift + Norwegian Coastal Current) all illustrate this principle. NCERT lists this as a direct effect of currents on human activity.
Assertion (A): The currents of the northern Indian Ocean reverse direction with the seasons, while those of the North Atlantic and North Pacific do not.
Reason (R): Monsoon winds over the northern Indian Ocean reverse twice a year, dragging the surface currents with them; the trade winds and westerlies of the Atlantic and Pacific are largely steady all year.
Answer: (A) — Both true; R is the correct explanation. Wind drives surface currents, so a wind that flips direction with the season produces a current that flips with it. This is why the Somali Current can flow north in summer (S-W monsoon) and south in winter (N-E monsoon) — a fact that shaped the entire history of Indian Ocean trade.

13.7 NCERT Exercises — Full Coverage

1. Multiple Choice Questions

(i) Upward and downward movement of ocean water is known as the:

  • (a) tide
  • (b) current
  • (c) wave
  • (d) none of the above
Answer: (a) tide. Tides are the periodical vertical (upward and downward) rise and fall of sea level once or twice a day, mainly due to the gravitational pull of the Moon and Sun. Waves are horizontal motion of energy; currents are horizontal flow of water.

(ii) Spring tides are caused:

  • (a) As result of the Moon and the Sun pulling the Earth gravitationally in the same direction.
  • (b) As result of the Moon and the Sun pulling the Earth gravitationally in the opposite direction.
  • (c) Indention in the coast line.
  • (d) None of the above.
Answer: (a). Spring tides occur when the Sun, Moon and Earth lie in a straight line — at full moon (Sun and Moon on opposite sides) or new moon (Sun and Moon on the same side). In both cases the gravitational pulls of Sun and Moon act along the same line, adding their effect and producing higher-than-average tides twice a month.

(iii) The distance between the Earth and the Moon is minimum when the Moon is in:

  • (a) Aphelion
  • (b) Perigee
  • (c) Perihelion
  • (d) Apogee
Answer: (b) Perigee. The Moon's orbit around the Earth is elliptical. Perigee is the point on this orbit when the Moon is closest to the Earth; apogee is the farthest. Aphelion and perihelion describe the Earth's distance from the Sun, not the Moon.

(iv) The Earth reaches its perihelion in:

  • (a) October
  • (b) September
  • (c) July
  • (d) January
Answer: (d) January. The Earth is closest to the Sun (perihelion, ~147 million km) around 3rd January every year. It is farthest (aphelion, ~152 million km) around 4th July. Tidal ranges are noticeably greater near perihelion.

2. Answer the Following Questions in About 30 Words

(i) What are waves?

Waves are the horizontal motion of energy across the ocean surface. The water particles only move in small circles as a wave passes; the wave shape — not the water itself — moves forward, generated mainly by wind blowing over the sea.

(ii) Where do waves in the ocean get their energy from?

Most waves get their energy from the wind blowing across the sea surface. Friction between the moving air and the water transfers kinetic energy. Wave height depends on wind speed, the duration it blows, and the distance over which it acts.

(iii) What are tides?

Tides are the regular vertical rise and fall of sea level — once or twice a day — produced mainly by the gravitational pull of the Moon and Sun on the waters of the Earth, and by the centrifugal force of the rotating Earth-Moon system.

(iv) How are tides caused?

Tides are caused by the combined effect of the Moon's gravitational pull (the major force), the Sun's smaller gravitational pull, and the centrifugal force of the rotating Earth-Moon system. Together they create two tidal bulges on opposite sides of the Earth.

(v) How are tides related to navigation?

High tides deepen river-mouth bars and shallow harbour entrances, allowing ships to enter and leave estuarine ports safely. Tide tables are predictable, so navigators schedule large vessel movements at high water — saving the ship from grounding on silt.

3. Answer the Following Questions in About 150 Words

(i) How do currents affect the temperature? How does it affect the temperature of coastal areas in the N. W. Europe?

Ocean currents are powerful re-distributors of heat. Warm currents raise the temperature of the air over the coasts they wash, and cold currents lower it. The west coasts of continents in tropical and subtropical latitudes (California, Atacama, Namibia, Western Australia) are bordered by cold currents — they are cool, foggy and arid, with a narrow temperature range. The east coasts of the same latitudes are bordered by warm currents (Gulf Stream, Brazil, Kuroshio, East Australian) — they are warm, rainy and equable.

The classic case of warm-current climate moderation is North-West Europe. The Gulf Stream is born in the Gulf of Mexico, races up the eastern coast of North America, and continues eastward across the Atlantic as the North Atlantic Drift. The Drift bathes the western coasts of Britain, Ireland, France, the Netherlands and Norway. Air masses crossing this warm water arrive at the European coast loaded with heat and moisture. As a result, ports such as London, Liverpool and Bergen remain ice-free in winter; rainfall is plentiful year-round; and average winter temperatures stay 10–15° C above what their high latitude would otherwise dictate. Without the Drift, north-west Europe would have a climate similar to Labrador on the same latitude — bitter winters and summer ice.

(ii) What are the causes of currents?

Ocean currents are caused by two groups of forces — primary forces, which initiate the movement of water, and secondary forces, which modify and sustain it.

Primary forces are four: (i) Heating by solar energy — water near the equator expands, raising the surface about 8 cm above the middle latitudes and creating a slight slope down which water flows. (ii) Wind — friction between the wind and the water surface drags the upper layers along; the trade winds and westerlies leave a clear signature on the surface currents. (iii) Gravity — pulls water down the surface "pile" set up by solar heating. (iv) Coriolis force — deflects moving water to the right in the Northern Hemisphere and to the left in the Southern, producing the great circular flows called gyres.

Secondary forces are the differences in temperature and salinity that change water density. Cold and salty water is denser and sinks; warm and fresher water rises. This drives the deep thermohaline circulation: cold water at the poles sinks and creeps along the deep ocean floor toward the equator, while warm surface water flows polewards to replace it. The combined effect of primary and secondary forces is the worldwide system of currents shown on the ocean map.

Project Work

(i) Visit a lake or a pond and observe the movement of waves. Throw a stone and notice how waves are generated.

Field-work guidance. Choose a still lake or pond. Drop a stone gently. Observe: (1) ripples spread outward in concentric circles from the impact point. (2) Place a leaf on the surface a metre away — note that the leaf bobs up-and-down and forward-and-back, but is not carried to the edge of the pond. (3) Measure approximately the wavelength (crest-to-crest distance) and time the period (count crests passing a fixed reed in 10 seconds). (4) Compare a small stone vs a large stone — larger initial energy gives larger wave height and longer travel before dying. Conclude: water particles do not travel; only the wave shape moves outward — the same principle that operates in the open ocean. Sketch a diagram in your notebook with at least four crests, marking wavelength and amplitude.

(ii) Take a globe and a map showing the currents of the oceans. Discuss why certain currents are warm or cold and why they deflect in certain places and examine the reasons.

Discussion guide. On the globe, trace one closed gyre at a time — for example the North Atlantic gyre. Note that the warm current (Gulf Stream) flows from the equator poleward on the western side, while the cold current (Canary) flows from the pole equatorward on the eastern side. The temperature labels follow the source of the water, not the geography. Now examine the deflections: in the North Atlantic the gyre runs clockwise; in the South Atlantic it runs anti-clockwise. The reason is the Coriolis force — moving water curves to the right in the Northern Hemisphere and to the left in the Southern, because the Earth rotates beneath it. Continents act as walls that turn the flow back into a closed loop. Repeat the same analysis for the Pacific and Indian Oceans, paying special attention to the seasonal reversal in the northern Indian Ocean caused by the monsoon winds. Present your findings as a flow diagram in class.

📋 Chapter 13 — Summary

  • Ocean water is dynamic: it shows three movements — waves (horizontal energy), tides (vertical rise/fall) and currents (horizontal flow of water).
  • Waves are energy travelling across the surface. Water particles move in small circles. Wind is the master cause; size depends on wind speed, duration and fetch. A wave breaks where depth < ½ wavelength. Tsunamis are different — caused by undersea earthquakes, with very long wavelength but small height in the open ocean, growing devastatingly tall on the coast.
  • Wave anatomy: crest, trough, height, amplitude, length, period, speed (knots), frequency. Swash is the rush up the beach; backwash is the drain down.
  • Tides are the rise and fall of sea level due to the Moon's gravity (major), the Sun's gravity (minor) and the centrifugal force. Two bulges form, so most coasts get two highs and two lows in a day.
  • Tide types by frequency: semi-diurnal (most common), diurnal, mixed. By geometry: spring tides (Sun-Moon-Earth in a line; full and new moon) and neap tides (Sun and Moon at right angles; first and third quarter).
  • Perigee/apogee (Moon's distance) and perihelion/aphelion (Earth's distance from Sun) further increase or decrease tidal range; the Bay of Fundy holds the world record at 15–16 m. The flow upstream into a funnel-shaped estuary can form a tidal bore (Hooghly, Bay of Fundy, Bristol Channel, Amazon Pororoca).
  • Importance of tides: navigation through harbour bars, fishing schedules, desilting, removal of polluted water from estuaries, and electricity generation (Canada, France, Russia, China; India's Durgaduani 3 MW project in Sundarbans).
  • Ocean currents are river-like flows. Primary causes: solar heating (8 cm equator-vs-mid-latitude slope), wind, gravity, Coriolis force. Secondary causes: temperature and salinity differences (driving the deep thermohaline circulation).
  • Currents may be classified by depth (surface ≈ 10 %, deep ≈ 90 %) or by temperature (warm currents on east coasts of low/mid latitudes; cold currents on west coasts).
  • Major warm currents: Gulf Stream, North Atlantic Drift, Brazil, Kuroshio, East Australian, Mozambique-Agulhas, Equatorial. Major cold currents: Labrador, California, Peru-Humboldt, Canary, Benguela, Oyashio, West Wind Drift (Antarctic Circumpolar). Northern Indian Ocean currents reverse with the monsoon.
  • Effects of currents: moderate climate (warm currents warm cold coasts, e.g. N.W. Europe; cold currents cool tropical west coasts, creating deserts); create the world's best fisheries where warm and cold currents mix (Grand Banks, Japan, North Sea); influence rainfall and fog; affect navigation; El Niño / La Niña are the most powerful current-driven climate switches.

🔑 Key Terms — Quick Recall

WaveHorizontal motion of energy on the ocean surface; water particles move only in small circles.
TsunamiLong-wavelength wave generated by undersea earthquake; small in the open ocean, devastating on the coast.
Crest / TroughHighest / lowest points of a wave.
Wave HeightVertical distance from trough to crest.
WavelengthHorizontal distance between two successive crests.
Wave PeriodTime between two successive crests passing a fixed point.
Swash / BackwashWater rushing up / draining down a beach after a wave breaks.
TidePeriodic vertical rise and fall of sea level, mainly due to Moon's gravity.
Spring TideHigher-than-average tide at full and new Moon (Sun-Moon-Earth in a line).
Neap TideLower-than-average tide at first and third quarter Moon (Sun and Moon at right angles).
Tidal BoreSingle steep wave running upstream in a funnel-shaped estuary at flood tide.
Perigee / ApogeeMoon's closest / farthest distance from Earth in its orbit.
Perihelion / AphelionEarth's closest (3 Jan) / farthest (4 Jul) distance from the Sun.
Ocean CurrentRiver-like flow of water in a definite direction across the ocean.
Gulf StreamMajor warm current in the western North Atlantic; warms north-west Europe.
KuroshioPacific warm current along the east coast of Asia; the "Gulf Stream of the Pacific".
Labrador CurrentCold current flowing south along the east coast of Canada; produces fog at the Grand Banks.
Coriolis ForceDeflection of moving fluids — to the right in the N. Hemisphere, to the left in the S. — caused by Earth's rotation.
GyreLarge circular current system in an ocean basin, formed by wind + Coriolis.
UpwellingRise of cold, nutrient-rich deep water to the surface, sustaining great fisheries.
El Niño / La NiñaPeriodic weakening / strengthening of the Peru-Humboldt cold current; major climate switches.
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