Deck 4: Water and Ocean Structure

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Question
The amount of dissolved oxygen that seawater can hold in solution will be greater in .

A) colder water
B) warmer water
C) water with a higher salinity
D) water with lower pressure and density
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Question
Eighty calories of heat energy must be removed per gram of pure water at 0°C to form ice. This represents water's .

A) latent heat of evaporation
B) latent heat of fusion
C) sensible heat
D) temperature
Question
Residence time is the .

A) same for all elements in the ocean
B) average length of time an element spends in the ocean
C) length of time it takes an element to dissolve in the ocean
D) same as mixing time
Question
The ocean appears to be in because the proportion and amounts of its dissolved salts per unit volume are nearly constant.

A) constant chemical flux
B) acid-base balance
C) thermal inertia
D) chemical equilibrium
Question
The hydrogen bonds of water molecules account for which of the following?

A) Water can cause surface tension and wetting.
B) Water has a long residence time in the atmosphere .
C) Water has a low boiling point.
D) Water has a low heat capacity.
Question
Oxygen enters seawater .

A) through the respiration of animals
B) as a byproduct of photosynthesis and diffusion from the atmosphere
C) as a result of decomposition of plant and animal remains
D) through the oxidation of metal ions in seawater
Question
If the ocean's water evaporated completely leaving its salts behind, what would the dried residue look like?

A) It would cover the entire planet with an even layer 45 meters thick.
B) It would evaporate into the air with the water.
C) It would leave a thin layer of salts at the bottom of the ocean basin.
D) Approximately 35% of the Earth would be covered with salt.
Question
As carbon dioxide enters the ocean, it .

A) is used by animals for respiration
B) bonds to water molecules to increase the salinity of the ocean
C) forms a carbonic acid
D) becomes a product of photosynthesis
Question
The term "salinity" refers to the total quantity of .

A) dissolved inorganic solids in water
B) sodium chloride dissolved in the ocean
C) chlorine in 1 kilogram of water
D) chloride ions in ocean water
Question
At the present time, the salinity of the ocean seems to be .

A) increasing due to evaporation as the Earth warms up
B) decreasing due to several years of excessive rainfall
C) increasing due to pollution
D) in chemical equilibrium, where ions are added to the ocean at the same rate as they are being removed
Question
What is the average residence time water stays in the ocean?

A) about 4,100 years
B) only 9 days
C) forever
D) approximately 3 million years
Question
Which of the following statements about pH is true?

A) The pH scale measures the concentration of hydrogen ions in a solution.
B) A pH of 3 is alkaline, a pH of 10 is acid.
C) An acid is a substance that combines with a hydrogen in solution.
D) On average, the pH of the ocean is moderately acidic.
Question
The property of water that accounts for the ability of liquid water to absorb large amounts of heat and change relatively little in temperature is called .

A) high heat capacity
B) latent heat of evaporation
C) latent heat of fusion
D) freezing coefficient
Question
Heat can be carried to the polar regions .

A) in ocean currents from the tropics
B) in the circumpolar ocean current
C) as water is transported away from the poles
D) as water is transported toward lower latitudes
Question
The hydrogen atoms in a water molecule tend to bond to .

A) each other
B) oxygen atoms of another water molecule
C) hydrogen atoms of another water molecule
D) all positively charged ions
Question
The components of ocean water whose quantities are less than 1 part per million (ppm) are considered .

A) excess volatiles
B) minor constituents
C) major constituents
D) trace elements
Question
What type of bond enables water molecules to stick together?

A) covalent bond
B) molecular bond
C) hydrogen bond
D) atomic bond
Question
About what percentage does water expand when it freezes?

A) 90%
B) 9.0%
C) 0.9%
D) 0.0%
Question
The two most abundant elements (ions) dissolved in seawater are .

A) fluorine and iodine
B) gold and silver
C) bromine and boron
D) sodium and chloride
Question
The average salinity of the world ocean is about .

A) 52%
B) 35%
C) 21.5%
D) 3.5%
Question
The geometry of the covalent bonds shared by the hydrogen atoms and oxygen atom in a water molecule account for its polarity.
Question
Red light is able to penetrate seawater the deepest.
Question
The salinity of seawater is a measure of the amount of sodium and chloride in a water sample.
Question
Which of the following statements is true regarding sound in the ocean?

A) Sound is scattered as it bounces off suspended particles in the water.
B) Sound intensity increases as it moves through the ocean because of absorption.
C) The speed of sound in the ocean is ten times less than the speed of sound in air.
D) The speed of sound in the ocean decreases as temperature increases.
Question
The thin layer of lighted water near the surface of the ocean is called the .

A) SOFAR layer
B) photic zone
C) aphotic zone
D) pycnocline
Question
As carbon dioxide dissolves at the surface of the ocean, it combines chemically to form a weak acid called carbonic acid.
Question
A zone in which the ocean's salinity changes rapidly with increasing depth is called .

A) halocline
B) thermocline
C) pycnocline
D) metacline
Question
The most precise way to calculate the salinity of seawater is to evaporate a known weight of seawater and weigh the residue.
Question
The deepest thermoclines can be found .

A) in temperate zones
B) in Antarctica
C) in the tropics
D) anywhere, depending on water salinity
Question
Which region of the ocean generally lacks a thermocline?

A) tropical region
B) temperate region
C) sub-tropical region
D) polar region
Question
Frozen water is more dense than liquid water.
Question
The amount of heat transported by water vapor in the atmosphere is greater than the amount of heat transported by ocean currents.
Question
The density of seawater will increase when .

A) the temperature increases
B) the salinity decreases
C) the salinity increases
D) dissolved gases increase
Question
The wavelengths of light that penetrate deepest into the ocean are .

A) red and violet
B) red and yellow
C) blue and red
D) green and blue
Question
What is the speed of sound in seawater of average salinity at the surface?

A) the same as the speed of light in the same conditions
B) approximately 1,000 feet per second
C) about 1,500 meters per second
D) twice the speed of sound in air
Question
The pycnocline can occur at the same range of depths as a halocline.
Question
Heat and temperature both measure random vibrations of an atom or a molecule.
Question
The bending of light or sound waves is referred to as .

A) reflection
B) refraction
C) absorption
D) transmission
Question
The ocean is stratified with respect to .

A) pH and light transmission
B) temperature and salinity
C) the amount of dissolved oxygen
D) the amount of dissolved carbon dioxide
Question
The density of seawater is affected by both temperature and salinity.
Question
The tendency for a substance to resist change in temperature with the gain or loss of heat energy is called .

A) latent heat
B) temperature
C) heat capacity
D) thermal inertia
Question
Where do dense water masses form?

A) near polar continental shelves
B) along the equatorial zone
C) in enclosed basins where river runoff is great
D) along active continental margins
Question
Which of the following contains more heat?

A) a pot of boiling water
B) a warm Jacuzzi
C) a room temperature swimming pool
D) the Pacific Ocean
Question
River water contributes which ions to the ocean?

A) carbon dioxide and oxygen
B) hydrogen and oxygen
C) calcium and bicarbonate ions
D) nitrogen and carbon dioxide
Question
What processes are responsible for the ocean's salinity?

A) weathering and evaporation
B) weathering and outgassing
C) evaporation and outgassing
D) condensation and evaporation
Question
Which statement best reflects global temperatures with respect to San Francisco, California and  Norfolk, Virginia, two cities that lie along the same latitude?

A) San Francisco is warmer in the winter and cooler in the summer.
B) Norfolk is warmer in the winter and cooler in the summer.
C) San Francisco and Norfolk have nearly identical temperatures all season long.
D) San Francisco is cooler in the winter and warmer in the summer.
Question
Describe how carbon dioxide acts as a buffer in seawater.
Question
Seawater is even though dissolved CO2 forms into a carbonic acid when combined with water.

A) neutral with a pH of 7
B) a strong acid
C) slightly acidic
D) slightly alkaline
Question
Carbon dioxide combines chemically with water to form a(n) .

A) weak acid
B) weak base
C) strong base
D) strong acid
Question
Sound can travel for much greater distances through water than light waves can before being absorbed because .

A) Sound waves continue to travel until something physically stops it.
B) Sound waves pick up speed the longer it travels.
C) Sound waves get absorbed and then retransmitted through the ocean every 50 feet allowing it to bounce faster than light waves.
D) Sound waves travel through water more efficiently than light waves.
Question
How does water dissolve sodium chloride (NaCl)?

A) Water molecules neutralize sodium ions (Na+) and chloride ions (Cl-).
B) The polarity of water causes the sodium ion (Na+) to separate from the chloride ion (Cl-).
C) When seawater evaporates, its ionic components combine to dissolve table salt.
D) Water molecules expand causing sodium ions (Na+) and chloride ions (Cl-) to decompose.
Question
Describe the distribution of oxygen in the ocean from the surface to the deep sea.
Question
How much more carbon dioxide can water hold than nitrogen or oxygen at saturation?

A) 50% more
B) 1,000 times more
C) twice as much
D) W ater cannot hold more carbon dioxide than nitrogen.
Question
Water behaves like a(n) , which prevents broad swings of pH.

A) acid
B) alkaline
C) polar molecule
D) buffer
Question
What is meant by the mixing time of the ocean?
Question
Describe the factors that affect the distance and the rate at which sound travels in the ocean. Would you expect sound to travel faster through warm or cold water? Shallow or deep? Why?
Question
When liquid water gets below 4°C, it .

A) forms a gas by breaking all of its hydrogen bonds
B) behaves like all other liquids and increases in density
C) begins to decrease in density by expanding
D) compresses its molecular structure and becomes more saline
Question
The of the ocean absorbs nearly all the infrared radiation that reaches the ocean surface.

A) upper 300 meters
B) lower 100 feet
C) first meter (3.3 feet)
D) top 1 foot
Question
Explain at least three processes that happen to light from the sun as it reaches the surface of the ocean.
Question
Which property gives water an unusually high surface tension resulting in a surface "skin" capable of supporting small objects?

A) wetting
B) adhesion
C) high heat capacity
D) cohesion
Question
Why does the concentration of dissolved oxygen decreases with depth and carbon dioxide increases with depth?
Question
Water resists rising in temperature as heat is added, or falling in temperature when heat is removed.
Question
Sound intensity increases as it travels through seawater because of spreading, scattering, and absorption.
Question
Why does ice float and why is this important for life in our ocean?
Question
How does the hydrogen bonds of water influence the physical properties of the ocean?
Question
Because CO2 dissolves readily in the ocean, it forms a carbonic acid making the average pH of the ocean slightly acidic.
Question
Cold water can dissolve more CO2 than warm water.
Question
How much water is on Earth and how does it circulate between the ocean, the atmosphere, and the land?
Question
Earth's poles have a deficiency of heat, and the equatorial region has an excess of heat. Why don't the polar regions freeze solid and the equatorial region boil over?
Question
When a hydrogen atom (the positive end) in one water molecule is attracted to the oxygen atom (the negative end) of an adjacent water molecule, a covalent bond forms.
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Deck 4: Water and Ocean Structure
1
The amount of dissolved oxygen that seawater can hold in solution will be greater in .

A) colder water
B) warmer water
C) water with a higher salinity
D) water with lower pressure and density
A
2
Eighty calories of heat energy must be removed per gram of pure water at 0°C to form ice. This represents water's .

A) latent heat of evaporation
B) latent heat of fusion
C) sensible heat
D) temperature
B
3
Residence time is the .

A) same for all elements in the ocean
B) average length of time an element spends in the ocean
C) length of time it takes an element to dissolve in the ocean
D) same as mixing time
B
4
The ocean appears to be in because the proportion and amounts of its dissolved salts per unit volume are nearly constant.

A) constant chemical flux
B) acid-base balance
C) thermal inertia
D) chemical equilibrium
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k this deck
5
The hydrogen bonds of water molecules account for which of the following?

A) Water can cause surface tension and wetting.
B) Water has a long residence time in the atmosphere .
C) Water has a low boiling point.
D) Water has a low heat capacity.
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k this deck
6
Oxygen enters seawater .

A) through the respiration of animals
B) as a byproduct of photosynthesis and diffusion from the atmosphere
C) as a result of decomposition of plant and animal remains
D) through the oxidation of metal ions in seawater
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Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
If the ocean's water evaporated completely leaving its salts behind, what would the dried residue look like?

A) It would cover the entire planet with an even layer 45 meters thick.
B) It would evaporate into the air with the water.
C) It would leave a thin layer of salts at the bottom of the ocean basin.
D) Approximately 35% of the Earth would be covered with salt.
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Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
As carbon dioxide enters the ocean, it .

A) is used by animals for respiration
B) bonds to water molecules to increase the salinity of the ocean
C) forms a carbonic acid
D) becomes a product of photosynthesis
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Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
The term "salinity" refers to the total quantity of .

A) dissolved inorganic solids in water
B) sodium chloride dissolved in the ocean
C) chlorine in 1 kilogram of water
D) chloride ions in ocean water
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Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
At the present time, the salinity of the ocean seems to be .

A) increasing due to evaporation as the Earth warms up
B) decreasing due to several years of excessive rainfall
C) increasing due to pollution
D) in chemical equilibrium, where ions are added to the ocean at the same rate as they are being removed
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
What is the average residence time water stays in the ocean?

A) about 4,100 years
B) only 9 days
C) forever
D) approximately 3 million years
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Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Which of the following statements about pH is true?

A) The pH scale measures the concentration of hydrogen ions in a solution.
B) A pH of 3 is alkaline, a pH of 10 is acid.
C) An acid is a substance that combines with a hydrogen in solution.
D) On average, the pH of the ocean is moderately acidic.
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Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
13
The property of water that accounts for the ability of liquid water to absorb large amounts of heat and change relatively little in temperature is called .

A) high heat capacity
B) latent heat of evaporation
C) latent heat of fusion
D) freezing coefficient
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Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Heat can be carried to the polar regions .

A) in ocean currents from the tropics
B) in the circumpolar ocean current
C) as water is transported away from the poles
D) as water is transported toward lower latitudes
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Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
15
The hydrogen atoms in a water molecule tend to bond to .

A) each other
B) oxygen atoms of another water molecule
C) hydrogen atoms of another water molecule
D) all positively charged ions
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k this deck
16
The components of ocean water whose quantities are less than 1 part per million (ppm) are considered .

A) excess volatiles
B) minor constituents
C) major constituents
D) trace elements
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k this deck
17
What type of bond enables water molecules to stick together?

A) covalent bond
B) molecular bond
C) hydrogen bond
D) atomic bond
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k this deck
18
About what percentage does water expand when it freezes?

A) 90%
B) 9.0%
C) 0.9%
D) 0.0%
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k this deck
19
The two most abundant elements (ions) dissolved in seawater are .

A) fluorine and iodine
B) gold and silver
C) bromine and boron
D) sodium and chloride
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Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
The average salinity of the world ocean is about .

A) 52%
B) 35%
C) 21.5%
D) 3.5%
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
The geometry of the covalent bonds shared by the hydrogen atoms and oxygen atom in a water molecule account for its polarity.
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k this deck
22
Red light is able to penetrate seawater the deepest.
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k this deck
23
The salinity of seawater is a measure of the amount of sodium and chloride in a water sample.
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Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Which of the following statements is true regarding sound in the ocean?

A) Sound is scattered as it bounces off suspended particles in the water.
B) Sound intensity increases as it moves through the ocean because of absorption.
C) The speed of sound in the ocean is ten times less than the speed of sound in air.
D) The speed of sound in the ocean decreases as temperature increases.
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k this deck
25
The thin layer of lighted water near the surface of the ocean is called the .

A) SOFAR layer
B) photic zone
C) aphotic zone
D) pycnocline
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
As carbon dioxide dissolves at the surface of the ocean, it combines chemically to form a weak acid called carbonic acid.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
A zone in which the ocean's salinity changes rapidly with increasing depth is called .

A) halocline
B) thermocline
C) pycnocline
D) metacline
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k this deck
28
The most precise way to calculate the salinity of seawater is to evaporate a known weight of seawater and weigh the residue.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
The deepest thermoclines can be found .

A) in temperate zones
B) in Antarctica
C) in the tropics
D) anywhere, depending on water salinity
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Which region of the ocean generally lacks a thermocline?

A) tropical region
B) temperate region
C) sub-tropical region
D) polar region
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k this deck
31
Frozen water is more dense than liquid water.
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k this deck
32
The amount of heat transported by water vapor in the atmosphere is greater than the amount of heat transported by ocean currents.
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k this deck
33
The density of seawater will increase when .

A) the temperature increases
B) the salinity decreases
C) the salinity increases
D) dissolved gases increase
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k this deck
34
The wavelengths of light that penetrate deepest into the ocean are .

A) red and violet
B) red and yellow
C) blue and red
D) green and blue
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35
What is the speed of sound in seawater of average salinity at the surface?

A) the same as the speed of light in the same conditions
B) approximately 1,000 feet per second
C) about 1,500 meters per second
D) twice the speed of sound in air
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36
The pycnocline can occur at the same range of depths as a halocline.
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k this deck
37
Heat and temperature both measure random vibrations of an atom or a molecule.
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k this deck
38
The bending of light or sound waves is referred to as .

A) reflection
B) refraction
C) absorption
D) transmission
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k this deck
39
The ocean is stratified with respect to .

A) pH and light transmission
B) temperature and salinity
C) the amount of dissolved oxygen
D) the amount of dissolved carbon dioxide
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k this deck
40
The density of seawater is affected by both temperature and salinity.
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k this deck
41
The tendency for a substance to resist change in temperature with the gain or loss of heat energy is called .

A) latent heat
B) temperature
C) heat capacity
D) thermal inertia
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
Where do dense water masses form?

A) near polar continental shelves
B) along the equatorial zone
C) in enclosed basins where river runoff is great
D) along active continental margins
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
Which of the following contains more heat?

A) a pot of boiling water
B) a warm Jacuzzi
C) a room temperature swimming pool
D) the Pacific Ocean
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k this deck
44
River water contributes which ions to the ocean?

A) carbon dioxide and oxygen
B) hydrogen and oxygen
C) calcium and bicarbonate ions
D) nitrogen and carbon dioxide
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k this deck
45
What processes are responsible for the ocean's salinity?

A) weathering and evaporation
B) weathering and outgassing
C) evaporation and outgassing
D) condensation and evaporation
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
Which statement best reflects global temperatures with respect to San Francisco, California and  Norfolk, Virginia, two cities that lie along the same latitude?

A) San Francisco is warmer in the winter and cooler in the summer.
B) Norfolk is warmer in the winter and cooler in the summer.
C) San Francisco and Norfolk have nearly identical temperatures all season long.
D) San Francisco is cooler in the winter and warmer in the summer.
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k this deck
47
Describe how carbon dioxide acts as a buffer in seawater.
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48
Seawater is even though dissolved CO2 forms into a carbonic acid when combined with water.

A) neutral with a pH of 7
B) a strong acid
C) slightly acidic
D) slightly alkaline
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k this deck
49
Carbon dioxide combines chemically with water to form a(n) .

A) weak acid
B) weak base
C) strong base
D) strong acid
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50
Sound can travel for much greater distances through water than light waves can before being absorbed because .

A) Sound waves continue to travel until something physically stops it.
B) Sound waves pick up speed the longer it travels.
C) Sound waves get absorbed and then retransmitted through the ocean every 50 feet allowing it to bounce faster than light waves.
D) Sound waves travel through water more efficiently than light waves.
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Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
51
How does water dissolve sodium chloride (NaCl)?

A) Water molecules neutralize sodium ions (Na+) and chloride ions (Cl-).
B) The polarity of water causes the sodium ion (Na+) to separate from the chloride ion (Cl-).
C) When seawater evaporates, its ionic components combine to dissolve table salt.
D) Water molecules expand causing sodium ions (Na+) and chloride ions (Cl-) to decompose.
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k this deck
52
Describe the distribution of oxygen in the ocean from the surface to the deep sea.
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53
How much more carbon dioxide can water hold than nitrogen or oxygen at saturation?

A) 50% more
B) 1,000 times more
C) twice as much
D) W ater cannot hold more carbon dioxide than nitrogen.
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54
Water behaves like a(n) , which prevents broad swings of pH.

A) acid
B) alkaline
C) polar molecule
D) buffer
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k this deck
55
What is meant by the mixing time of the ocean?
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56
Describe the factors that affect the distance and the rate at which sound travels in the ocean. Would you expect sound to travel faster through warm or cold water? Shallow or deep? Why?
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Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
57
When liquid water gets below 4°C, it .

A) forms a gas by breaking all of its hydrogen bonds
B) behaves like all other liquids and increases in density
C) begins to decrease in density by expanding
D) compresses its molecular structure and becomes more saline
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 70 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
58
The of the ocean absorbs nearly all the infrared radiation that reaches the ocean surface.

A) upper 300 meters
B) lower 100 feet
C) first meter (3.3 feet)
D) top 1 foot
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59
Explain at least three processes that happen to light from the sun as it reaches the surface of the ocean.
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60
Which property gives water an unusually high surface tension resulting in a surface "skin" capable of supporting small objects?

A) wetting
B) adhesion
C) high heat capacity
D) cohesion
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
61
Why does the concentration of dissolved oxygen decreases with depth and carbon dioxide increases with depth?
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62
Water resists rising in temperature as heat is added, or falling in temperature when heat is removed.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
63
Sound intensity increases as it travels through seawater because of spreading, scattering, and absorption.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
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64
Why does ice float and why is this important for life in our ocean?
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65
How does the hydrogen bonds of water influence the physical properties of the ocean?
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66
Because CO2 dissolves readily in the ocean, it forms a carbonic acid making the average pH of the ocean slightly acidic.
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67
Cold water can dissolve more CO2 than warm water.
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68
How much water is on Earth and how does it circulate between the ocean, the atmosphere, and the land?
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69
Earth's poles have a deficiency of heat, and the equatorial region has an excess of heat. Why don't the polar regions freeze solid and the equatorial region boil over?
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70
When a hydrogen atom (the positive end) in one water molecule is attracted to the oxygen atom (the negative end) of an adjacent water molecule, a covalent bond forms.
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