Deep ocean circulation(90% of ocean water) is caused by differences in temperature, salinity and suspended load. It is referred to as "Thermohaline"- meaning heat and salt- circulation.
The three types of ocean currents are surface currents, deep currents, and tidal currents. Surface currents are driven by winds, deep currents are driven by density and temperature differences, and tidal currents are driven by the gravitational pull of the moon and sun.
Temperature differences in water
Deep currents flow along the ocean floor, primarily in the abyssal plains and deep-sea trenches. These currents are driven by differences in water density, temperature, and salinity. They play a crucial role in distributing heat, nutrients, and dissolved gases around the world's ocean.
surface
Cold ocean currents sink under warm ocean currents to form deep ocean currents.
Deep ocean currents are predominantly cold.
Ocean currents is what forms surface currents. This starts deep in the ocean.
Deep ocean currents are in the depths of the oceans. Surface current are at the surface, not deep down. Deep ocean currents bring vitamins and nutrients to the shore, surface currents do not. Deep ocean currents are caused by salinity and temperature differences. Surface currents are cause by the force and impact of the wind.
Deep ocean currents are in the depths of the oceans. Surface current are at the surface, not deep down. Deep ocean currents bring vitamins and nutrients to the shore, surface currents do not. Deep ocean currents are caused by salinity and temperature differences. Surface currents are cause by the force and impact of the wind.
deep ocean currents are created by yo mama..... at night. deep ocean currents are created by yo mama..... at night. deep ocean currents are created by yo mama..... at night.
Water temperature differences create deep water currents through a process known as thermohaline circulation, driven by variations in density. Cold, dense water sinks and flows along the ocean floor, displacing warmer, less dense water upward. This movement drives a global conveyor belt system that circulates water throughout the world's oceans.
Global winds do not directly cause deep currents. Deep ocean currents are primarily driven by differences in water density, which are influenced by temperature and salinity. While global winds can indirectly affect the distribution and movement of deep currents through their impact on surface currents and mixing processes, they are not the primary driving force.