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1.2: An Interdisciplinary Science

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    31547
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    The scientific study of the world ocean, a field of science called oceanography, involves several different scientific disciplines. Generally, oceanographers identify with one of four major subdisciplines:

    Oceanography also borrows from astronomy, geophysics, meteorology, physiology, ecology, and environmental sciences, to name a few. The integration of many different fields of science into one makes oceanography an interdisciplinary science, one that shares and integrates the tools and knowledge of many sciences. Though oceanographers tend to specialize in one discipline, their work requires them to be conversant in other sciences as well. They tend to dabble in multiple subjects, which is why an oceanography course can be so much fun—you learn a little of everything!

    Oceanography also involves a host of non-scientist professionals, too, from technicians and programmers to a ship’s crew. Technicians provide an onboard repair shop for finicky instruments, programmers maintain the software that communicates with ocean sensors, and the crew navigate the ship, help deploy gear, and cook your meals. (A good rule to follow on board an oceanographic vessel? Be nice to the cook.) Without these support personnel, oceanography would be next to impossible.

    From a practical standpoint, oceanographers seek to understand the ways that the ocean serves humanity, how it provides what are called ecosystem services. Costanza et al. (1997) define ecosystem services as “the ecological characteristics, functions, or processes that directly or indirectly contribute to human well-being.” The ocean, for example, provides food, water, materials, waste purification, and a stable climate, among other things. Oceanographers want to know how human activities interfere with the services the ocean provides—how our actions affect the ocean’s ability to function properly and provide services to humanity. With more global-scale environmental and social challenges facing us than ever before, the stakes for understanding the ocean have never been higher.


    This page titled 1.2: An Interdisciplinary Science is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by W. Sean Chamberlin, Nicki Shaw, and Martha Rich (Blue Planet Publishing) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.