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Ocean current

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

Map showing the major ocean currents and gyres of the world.

An ocean current is a steady flow of seawater. It is pushed by forces like wind, the Coriolis effect, and changes in temperature and salinity. These currents move across oceans or up and down, carrying nutrients and gases like carbon dioxide.

Ocean surface currents

Ocean currents can be warm or cold. They are called drifts, currents, or streams based on how fast and in what direction they move. Currents help shape climate and weather around the world. For example, the Gulf Stream keeps northwest Europe warmer than other places at the same latitude.

The biggest ocean current is the Antarctic Circumpolar Current. It flows clockwise around Antarctica, linking all the oceanic basins. Together, currents form a global conveyor belt that helps control Earth’s climate.

Causes

The bathymetry of the Kerguelen Plateau in the Southern Ocean governs the course of the Kerguelen deep western boundary current, part of the global network of ocean currents.

Ocean currents are the continuous movement of seawater. They are driven by several forces. The main forces include wind, the pull of the Moon creating tides, and differences in water density caused by temperature and salt levels. These forces work together to move water in the oceans.

There are two main types of currents: surface currents and deep-water currents. Surface currents are mostly pushed by wind. Deep-water currents are driven by changes in water density due to temperature and saltiness. The way these currents move can be influenced by the shape of the ocean floor and the Earth's rotation.

Effects on climate and ecology

Ocean currents help control temperatures around the world. For example, a current brings warm water to parts of Europe, stopping ice from forming near the shore. This helps ships reach ports. This shows how currents affect the weather of places they flow through. They also matter for things like floating trash in the sea.

Plankton are dispersed by ocean currents.

Cold currents from colder parts of the world bring nutrients to the surface. These nutrients help tiny plants called plankton grow. Many sea animals eat plankton. Currents also help spread animals and plants, even moving baby fish and plants far away. They can even carry land animals like tortoises on floating objects to new islands.

Ocean currents and climate change

Human-induced climate change is leading to long-term alterations in ocean and atmospheric circulation. The accumulation of greenhouse gases traps extra heat within the Earth's system, causing both the atmosphere and oceans to warm. Notably, over 90% of this trapped heat is absorbed by the oceans. There are signs that crucial circulation patterns are shifting, with growing evidence suggesting that the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation may be slowing down.

The rise in temperatures in the air is expected to change how strong surface ocean currents are, how they move, and how they spread things around. Ocean currents help shape our climate, and changes in climate can, in turn, change these currents.

Over the past hundred years, we have seen that some important currents along coastlines are warming up faster than the rest of the ocean. This warming may make these currents stronger. There are also ideas that a big current in the Atlantic might slow down because of climate change, which could change the weather in northern Europe. Another big current around Antarctica is also slowing down. Wind patterns, which also affect currents, are changing because of climate change and natural processes. These changes in currents can affect where marine animals and plants end up, possibly moving some species toward the poles and deeper water.

Economic importance

Knowing about surface ocean currents helps save money on shipping because ships use less fuel when they travel with the currents. In the time of sailing ships, understanding wind patterns and ocean currents was very important. Ships used currents to help them reach ports and return home. Not knowing about these currents may have caused some exploration failures.

Today, ocean currents can help with sailing races and even provide power for machines in places like Japan, Florida, and Hawaii. Currents also affect the fishing industry. For example, currents like the Tsugaru, Oyashio, and Kuroshio change the temperature of the western North Pacific, which helps determine where fish like Skipjack tuna live. Even currents from nearby areas can influence a country's fishing industry.

Distribution

Currents of the Arctic Ocean

Currents of the Atlantic Ocean

A 1943 map of the world's ocean currents

Currents of the Indian Ocean

Currents of the Pacific Ocean

A recording current meter. It records information about currents (speed, direction, depth, temperature).

Currents of the Southern Ocean

  • Antarctic Circumpolar Current – Ocean current that flows clockwise from west to east around Antarctica
  • Tasman Outflow – Deepwater current that flows from the Pacific Ocean past Tasmania into the Indian Ocean
  • Kerguelen deep western boundary current

Oceanic gyres

Images

A scientific illustration showing warm, salty ocean currents called Meddies in the Atlantic Ocean.
Powerful ocean waves crashing along the California coastline during a stormy day.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Ocean current, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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