Well as you go further down into the ocean, it will be colder.
Usually but not always!! Temperature and salinity affect the density of seawater, and in many systems, density increases with depth (as temperature decreases and salinity increases). IT is however possible to observe patterns where dense water at depth is either very salty but warm, or very cold, but nearly fresh.
Well as you go further down into the ocean, it will be colder.
Usually but not always!! Temperature and salinity affect the density of seawater, and in many systems, density increases with depth (as temperature decreases and salinity increases). IT is however possible to observe patterns where dense water at depth is either very salty but warm, or very cold, but nearly fresh.
Hope I helped <3 good luck with your quiz and/or quick check!
as ocean depth increases, the temperature decreases (becomes colder)
well, obviously it's because the farther down in the water you go, the less sun you are recieving. the sun can't just make everything warm, now can it?
The relationship between depth and sunlight is positive. The more sunlight there is, the deeper you can see into the ocean.
it is how much salt mass in the ocean water
The pressure (force per cm2) at a particular depth is the weight of water above that square centimetre.
The sun is not as close to the bottom of the ocean as it is at the top.
Temperature decreases with depth.
Latitude and depth!!
Thermocline
Depth is a measure of distance between the surface and the ocean floor.
The relationship between the rise of ocean temperatures and the rise in the level of atmospheric carbon dioxide is that when there is a rise in atmospheric carbon dioxide the warmer the temperature of the ocean is
the deeper you go, the colder the ocean water gets
Thermocline
the depth does affect the temperature because less sun light gets to the bottom to get less heat