1 00:00:06,549 --> 00:00:07,989 In 1992, 2 00:00:07,989 --> 00:00:12,211 a cargo ship carrying bath toys got caught in a storm. 3 00:00:12,211 --> 00:00:14,647 Shipping containers washed overboard, 4 00:00:14,647 --> 00:00:20,837 and the waves swept 28,000 rubber ducks and other toys into the North Pacific. 5 00:00:20,837 --> 00:00:22,697 But they didn’t stick together. 6 00:00:22,697 --> 00:00:23,977 Quite the opposite– 7 00:00:23,977 --> 00:00:27,307 the ducks have since washed up all over the world, 8 00:00:27,307 --> 00:00:29,557 and researchers have used their paths 9 00:00:29,557 --> 00:00:33,727 to chart a better understanding of ocean currents. 10 00:00:33,727 --> 00:00:36,493 Ocean currents are driven by a range of sources: 11 00:00:36,493 --> 00:00:40,043 the wind, tides, changes in water density, 12 00:00:40,043 --> 00:00:43,073 and the rotation of the Earth. 13 00:00:43,073 --> 00:00:47,733 The topography of the ocean floor and the shoreline modifies those motions, 14 00:00:47,733 --> 00:00:49,360 causing currents to speed up, 15 00:00:49,360 --> 00:00:52,200 slow down, or change direction. 16 00:00:52,200 --> 00:00:55,030 Ocean currents fall into two main categories: 17 00:00:55,030 --> 00:00:58,290 surface currents and deep ocean currents. 18 00:00:58,290 --> 00:01:00,050 Surface currents control the motion 19 00:01:00,050 --> 00:01:02,660 of the top 10 percent of the ocean’s water, 20 00:01:02,660 --> 00:01:06,230 while deep-ocean currents mobilize the other 90 percent. 21 00:01:06,230 --> 00:01:07,930 Though they have different causes, 22 00:01:07,930 --> 00:01:10,960 surface and deep ocean currents influence each other 23 00:01:10,960 --> 00:01:15,160 in an intricate dance that keeps the entire ocean moving. 24 00:01:15,160 --> 00:01:16,185 Near the shore, 25 00:01:16,185 --> 00:01:19,635 surface currents are driven by both the wind and tides, 26 00:01:19,635 --> 00:01:24,505 which draw water back and forth as the water level falls and rises. 27 00:01:24,505 --> 00:01:29,773 Meanwhile, in the open ocean, wind is the major force behind surface currents. 28 00:01:29,773 --> 00:01:31,517 As wind blows over the ocean, 29 00:01:31,517 --> 00:01:34,507 it drags the top layers of water along with it. 30 00:01:34,507 --> 00:01:37,477 That moving water pulls on the layers underneath, 31 00:01:37,477 --> 00:01:39,697 and those pull on the ones beneath them. 32 00:01:39,697 --> 00:01:43,197 In fact, water as deep as 400 meters 33 00:01:43,197 --> 00:01:47,027 is still affected by the wind at the ocean’s surface. 34 00:01:47,027 --> 00:01:51,337 If you zoom out to look at the patterns of surface currents all over the earth, 35 00:01:51,337 --> 00:01:54,820 you’ll see that they form big loops called gyres, 36 00:01:54,820 --> 00:01:57,580 which travel clockwise in the northern hemisphere 37 00:01:57,580 --> 00:02:00,430 and counter-clockwise in the southern hemisphere. 38 00:02:00,430 --> 00:02:02,620 That’s because of the way the Earth’s rotation 39 00:02:02,620 --> 00:02:06,630 affects the wind patterns that give rise to these currents. 40 00:02:06,630 --> 00:02:08,280 If the earth didn’t rotate, 41 00:02:08,280 --> 00:02:10,740 air and water would simply move back and forth 42 00:02:10,740 --> 00:02:12,820 between low pressure at the equator 43 00:02:12,820 --> 00:02:14,610 and high pressure at the poles. 44 00:02:14,610 --> 00:02:16,350 But as the earth spins, 45 00:02:16,350 --> 00:02:20,860 air moving from the equator to the North Pole is deflected eastward, 46 00:02:20,860 --> 00:02:24,509 and air moving back down is deflected westward. 47 00:02:24,509 --> 00:02:27,299 The mirror image happens in the southern hemisphere, 48 00:02:27,299 --> 00:02:29,229 so that the major streams of wind 49 00:02:29,229 --> 00:02:32,789 form loop-like patterns around the ocean basins. 50 00:02:32,789 --> 00:02:35,679 This is called the Coriolis Effect. 51 00:02:35,679 --> 00:02:40,129 The winds push the ocean beneath them into the same rotating gyres. 52 00:02:40,129 --> 00:02:43,793 And because water holds onto heat more effectively than air, 53 00:02:43,793 --> 00:02:48,303 these currents help redistribute warmth around the globe. 54 00:02:48,303 --> 00:02:49,864 Unlike surface currents, 55 00:02:49,864 --> 00:02:55,014 deep ocean currents are driven primarily by changes in the density of seawater. 56 00:02:55,014 --> 00:02:57,326 As water moves towards the North Pole, 57 00:02:57,326 --> 00:02:58,496 it gets colder. 58 00:02:58,496 --> 00:03:01,036 It also has a higher concentration of salt, 59 00:03:01,036 --> 00:03:05,956 because the ice crystals that form trap water while leaving salt behind. 60 00:03:05,956 --> 00:03:08,796 This cold, salty water is more dense, 61 00:03:08,796 --> 00:03:09,946 so it sinks, 62 00:03:09,946 --> 00:03:12,616 and warmer surface water takes its place, 63 00:03:12,616 --> 00:03:17,076 setting up a vertical current called thermohaline circulation. 64 00:03:17,076 --> 00:03:21,563 Thermohaline circulation of deep water and wind-driven surface currents 65 00:03:21,563 --> 00:03:26,319 combine to form a winding loop called the Global Conveyor Belt. 66 00:03:26,319 --> 00:03:29,486 As water moves from the depths of the ocean to the surface, 67 00:03:29,486 --> 00:03:32,606 it carries nutrients that nourish the microorganisms 68 00:03:32,606 --> 00:03:35,726 which form the base of many ocean food chains. 69 00:03:35,726 --> 00:03:39,306 The global conveyor belt is the longest current in the world, 70 00:03:39,306 --> 00:03:41,306 snaking all around the globe. 71 00:03:41,306 --> 00:03:44,906 But it only moves a few centimeters per second. 72 00:03:44,906 --> 00:03:49,456 It could take a drop of water a thousand years to make the full trip. 73 00:03:49,456 --> 00:03:52,996 However, rising sea temperatures are causing the conveyor belt 74 00:03:52,996 --> 00:03:54,956 to seemingly slow down. 75 00:03:54,956 --> 00:03:57,746 Models show this causing havoc with weather systems 76 00:03:57,746 --> 00:03:59,616 on both sides of the Atlantic, 77 00:03:59,616 --> 00:04:02,856 and no one knows what would happen if it continues to slow 78 00:04:02,856 --> 00:04:05,146 or if it stopped altogether. 79 00:04:05,146 --> 00:04:09,136 The only way we’ll be able to forecast correctly and prepare accordingly 80 00:04:09,136 --> 00:04:13,826 will be to continue to study currents and the powerful forces that shape them.