Great Ocean Conveyor to Circulate Water of the World
Although it may not seem like it at times, the ocean is
constantly in motion both above and below the water. Underneath
the surface of the water there are currents and waves that are
caused by the winds on the surface of the sea. The earth's
gravity also has a say in the swell and the tide of the ocean as
it pulls it back and forth in a grand lunar dance. Deep below
that surface of the ocean is another type of motion that is
called the Great Ocean Conveyor, or the thermohaline
circulation. Not many people know about the Conveyor but it is
very much alive and moving in the oceans of the world.
The Great Ocean Conveyor doesn't move very fast but it does
incorporate enough water to fill the Amazon River at least one
hundred times. The movement of the Great Ocean Conveyor has been
recorded at 10cm each second and the amount of water that moves
each second equals approximately thirty million cubic meters.
With so much movement happening below the ocean why don't we
notice it from above? The water at the surface of the ocean is
greatly heated by the sun at the earth's equator. As this water
flows upward to the higher latitudes this heat is slowly
released into the earth's atmosphere. When this once warm water
starts to cool down it becomes thicker and heavier, causing it
to drift towards the bottom of the ocean. It is this water deep
in the ocean that circulates around and around, emerging at the
surface of the ocean, somewhere in the world, many years later.
The Great Ocean Conveyor continues to move water around until it
rises and becomes warmer. Cold ocean water from the northern end
of the planet sinks down and becomes part of the Great Ocean
Conveyor, only to emerge years later in a warmer climate. It is
the Great Ocean Conveyor that keeps the water of the world
circulating and mixing, keeping the earth healthy.