Evolution of Earth: ocean currents (Evolution)

by David Turell @, Wednesday, November 30, 2022, 16:47 (514 days ago) @ David Turell

Stated when oceans appeared:

https://www.livescience.com/where-did-ocean-currents-come-from?utm_term=C3CFD69C-A485-4...

"Flows of water in Earth's seas have guided navigators for centuries and shaped climates for much longer. But how did ocean currents first emerge?

"These flows would have appeared with the planet's first oceans, around 4 billion to 4.5 billion years ago, spurred by the same forces that propel them today: winds, tides, global differences in temperature and saltiness, and the planet's rotation.

"Ocean currents behave much like rivers within the larger bodies of water, according to the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa(opens in new tab). They range in size from small currents near beaches to ocean-spanning flows, like the enormous gyres, or elliptical cycles, that snake between continents. For example, in the North Atlantic Gyre, water flows west along the equator, north past the U.S. East Coast in the Gulf Stream, back east along the Arctic, then south past Europe and Africa as the Canary Current.

"Winds, powered by solar energy, direct surface currents, like those in gyres. Differences in temperature and saltiness between the equator and Earth's poles power deep-water currents known as thermohaline (for "heat" plus "salt") circulation. It can take a thousand years to complete a global thermohaline cycle, James Potemra(opens in new tab), a professor at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Institute of Geophysics and Planetology, told Live Science. Tides create smaller currents, while Earth's spin pushes gyres clockwise in the Northern Hemisphere and counterclockwise in the Southern Hemisphere (the so-called Coriolis effect).

***

"Conservative estimates put the ocean's age at 3.8 billion years, Fu said. However, ancient zircon crystals in Australia bear evidence of ocean water 4.4 billion years ago, or about 100 million years after Earth formed. "So very early in Earth's history, we would have had oceans," Fu said.

"Primeval current patterns would have been very different, however. The continents have shifted position drastically, likely all joined together in supercontinents at various times, with other configurations in between. That would have changed the paths surface currents took, with no pocket between the Old and New worlds to forge the North Atlantic Gyre, for example.

"Because of the time it takes for continents to appreciably change configuration, though, currents seem eternal on human timescales. Today's major currents "probably came into existence … millions of years ago because of some continent rearrangement," Fu said.

"Historical records, in fact, show the long persistence of today's currents. "It was Benjamin Franklin that first discovered the Gulf Stream, because he noticed when the ships came over that this current … would take them north very quickly," Potemra said. "And the Vikings would have experienced the Gulf Stream.'"

Comment: these currents would have affected life in the oceans. Similar to climate these ocean currents ran on their own, not under God's intimate controls.


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