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10.8: Final Thoughts

  • Page ID
    31676
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    Since humans first ventured into the sea on primitive boats, the surface currents have carried us in search of new opportunities. Even now, the surface currents serve as convenient ocean highways for a myriad of human industries. Unfortunately, the surface currents also carry with them the debris of humanity. As we learned in Chapter 6, “The ocean is downhill from everywhere” (Moore 2023). Indeed, anything tossed onto the ground—even thousands of miles from the ocean—will under the power of winds or moving water make its way into the ocean. Pollutants and toxins, too, released in one part of the ocean make their way to other parts, near and far. It’s an extraordinary journey with a lesson for humans: What happens in one part of the ocean can affect the entire ocean. In other words, what happens here doesn’t always stay here. Our wastes and byproducts of modern industrial civilization—no matter where they originate—reach all parts of the ocean and every shore.

    The world ocean circulation lies at the heart of the concept of a world ocean discussed in Chapter 1: it’s all one ocean. Waters that flow across the surface of the ocean lose buoyancy in polar regions and sink to the abyss. Winds and other mixing processes pull these waters back to the surface. Surface waters that sink in one part of the ocean—say, off the coast of Greenland in the North Atlantic—may travel southward toward the Antarctic, bend eastward below the southern tip of Africa, and be pulled to the surface of the South Pacific a thousand years later. For better or for worse, we are all connected to the same world ocean system.

    Our understanding of the surface circulation provides a context for appreciating the interconnectedness of the ocean. To the extent that the ocean connects our activities and our lives, we should always remember it’s all one ocean, our world ocean.


    This page titled 10.8: Final Thoughts 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.