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For other uses, see Ocean (disambiguation).
The world's oceans as seen from the South Pacific

Ocean (from Okeanos, Greek for river, the ancient Greeks noticed that a strong current flowed off Gibraltar, and assumed it was a great river); covers almost three quarters (71%) of the surface of the Earth, and nearly half of the world's marine waters are over 3000 m deep.

This global, interconnected body of salt water, called the World Ocean, is divided by the continents and archipelagos into the following bodies, from the largest to the smallest: the Pacific Ocean, the Atlantic Ocean, the Indian Ocean, the Southern Ocean (according to some authorities such as International Hydrographic Organization (IHO)), and the Arctic Ocean.

Some geographers and some governments but not the US, recognize the IHO as defining official water body names and boundaries. (The US authority is the United States Board on Geographic Names.) The IHO officially sanctioned the Southern Ocean name only in 2000, but its definition by a line of latitude (with IHO members widely disputing which line of latitude) has left its acceptance as a fifth ocean open to question. The National Geographic Society and some other leading geographers and cartographers continue to use "South Pacific", "South Atlantic", and "Indian" Ocean for the waters around Antarctica. A few Oceanographers recognize only three oceans also, treating the Arctic Ocean (or the Arctic Sea) as a part of the Atlantic Ocean.

Smaller regions of the oceans are called seas, gulfs, straits and other names.

Geologically, an ocean is an area of oceanic crust covered by water. Oceanic crust is the thin layer of solidified volcanic basalt that covers the Earth's mantle where there are no continents. From this point of view, there are three "oceans" today: the World Ocean, and the Black and Caspian Seas that were formed by the collision of Cimmeria with Laurasia. The Mediterranean Sea is very nearly its own "ocean", being connected to the World Ocean through the Strait of Gibraltar, and indeed several times over the last few million years movement of the African Continent has closed the strait off entirely, making the Mediterranean a fourth "ocean". (The Black Sea is connected to the Mediterranean through the Bosporus, but this is in effect a natural canal cut through continental rock some 7000 years ago, rather than a piece of oceanic sea floor like the Strait of Gibraltar.)

The area of the World Ocean is 361 million km², its volume is 1340 million km³, and its average depth is 3711 m. Nearly half of the world's marine waters are over 3000 m deep.[1] This does not include seas not connected to the World Ocean, such as the Caspian Sea.

The total mass of the hydrosphere is about 1.4 × 1021 kg, ca. 0.023 % of the Earth's total mass.

See sea water for a detailed discussion of ocean water composition, most notably its salinity.

Contents

  • 1 Origins
  • 2 Exploration
  • 3 Climate
  • 4 Ecology
  • 5 Economy
  • 6 Ancient oceans
  • 7 Extraterrestrial oceans
  • 8 See also
  • 9 External links

Origins

Main article: Origin of the world's oceans

There are thought to have been two primary sources for the primordial water that formed Earth's oceans, with debate as to their relative importance. One is outgassing of steam from the Earth's interior, which contributed to the atmosphere and, once the young planet had sufficiently cooled, produced rain; the other is the large numbers of comets which impacted with the Earth and added their water to it.

Exploration

Main article: Ocean exploration
Map of large underwater features. (1995, NOAA)

Travel on the surface of the ocean through the use of boats dates back to prehistoric times, but only in modern times has extensive underwater travel become possible.

The deepest point in the ocean is the Mariana Trench located in the Pacific Ocean near the Northern Mariana Islands. It has a maximum depth of 10,923 m (35,838 ft) [2]. It was fully surveyed in 1951 by the British naval vessel, "Challenger II" which gave its name to the deepest part of the trench, the "Challenger Deep".

Much of the bottom of the world's oceans is unexplored and unmapped. A global image of many underwater features larger than 10 km was created in 1995 based on gravitational distortions of the nearby sea surface.

Climate

One of the most dramatic forms of weather occurs over the oceans: tropical cyclones (also called "typhoons" and "hurricanes" depending upon where the system forms). Ocean currents greatly affect Earth's climate by transferring warm or cold air and precipitation to coastal regions, where they may be carried inland by winds. The Antarctic Circumpolar Current encircles that continent, influencing the area's climate and connecting currents in several oceans.

Ecology

The oceans are home to the majority of plant and animal life on Earth. These lifeforms include:

  • fish
  • cetacea such as whales, dolphins and porpoises,
  • cephalopods such as the octopus
  • crustaceans such as lobsters and shrimp
  • marine worms
  • plankton
  • krill

Economy

The oceans are essential to transportation: a huge portion of the world's goods are moved by ship between the world's seaports. Important ship canals include the Saint Lawrence Seaway, Panama Canal, and Suez Canal.

Ancient oceans

Continental drift has reconfigured the Earth's oceans, joining and splitting ancient oceans to form the current oceans. Ancient oceans include:

  • Panthalassa, the vast world ocean that surrounded the Pangaea supercontinent.
  • Tethys Ocean, the ocean between the ancient continents of Gondwana and Laurasia.
  • Iapetus Ocean, the southern hemisphere ocean between Baltica and Avalonia.


Extraterrestrial oceans

Earth is the only known planet with liquid water on its surface, and is certainly the only such in our own solar system. However, liquid water is thought to be present under the surface of several natural satellites, particularly the Galilean moons of Europa, and, with less certainty, Callisto and Ganymede. Geysers have been found on Enceladus. Other icy moons may have once had internal oceans that have now frozen, such as Triton. The planets Uranus and Neptune may also possess large oceans of liquid water under their thick atmospheres, though their internal structure is not well understood at this time.

There is currently much debate over whether Mars once had an ocean of water in its northern hemisphere, and over what happened to it if it did; recent findings by the Mars Exploration Rover mission indicate it had some long-term standing water in at least one location, but its extent is not known.

Liquid hydrocarbons were thought to be present on the surface of Titan, though it may be more accurate to describe them as "lakes" rather than an "ocean". Cassini-Huygens space mission, which dropped the Huygens probe onto Titan's surface in January 2005, found that Titan is currently without such lakes but that it may gain and lose them periodically. Titan is also thought likely to have a subterranean water ocean under the mix of ice and hydrocarbons that forms its outer crust.

See also

  • Oceanography
  • International Maritime Organization
  • Sea
  • Mediterranean sea
  • Marginal sea
  • Sea salt
  • Water
  • World Ocean Day
  • Marine biology
  • Pelagic zone

External links

Look up Ocean in Wiktionary, the free dictionary
  • Ocean Explorer - An educational and reference resource from NOAA
  • Science taps into ocean secrets
  • Why is the ocean salty?
  • Official IHO boundaries of Oceans and Seas
  • The Hydrogen Expedition The first circumnavigation of the globe in a hydrogen fuel cell powered boat
  • Coreocean
  • NOPP - The National Oceanographic Partnership Program
  • World Ocean Observatory
  • Greenpeace Defending our Oceans

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "ocean".