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11.6: Visualizing Layers- The XZ Graph

  • Page ID
    31659
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    To represent the properties of the water column—such as those measured during a CTD cast—oceanographers have created a special kind of graph. The XZ graph resembles an upside-down XY graph, except that the vertical axis, the z-axis, extends downward from the origin. In an XY graph, the y-axis extends upward from the origin. The vertical z-axis represents water depth, usually in meters. In the top left corner of the graph—the origin, where the x-axis and the z-axis intersect—the depth is set to zero. Thus, the x-axis at zero depth represents some property, X, at the surface of the ocean. Properties such as temperature, salinity, and light often change with depth. An XZ graph illustrates the changes in ocean properties you might experience as you descend into the deep. Multiple x-axes are allowed too. By adding x-axes above the first one to represent other properties (such as salinity, chlorophyll, and others), oceanographers can see how properties vary simultaneously with depth in the water column. (See Hautala for additional details.)

    A useful way to envision the water column and how its properties change with depth is to stare at a ceiling, the higher the better. Imagine that you are looking up at the ocean surface—the ceiling—from the sea bottom—the floor. Then consider how some property, like temperature, might vary from the ceiling (i.e., ocean surface) to the floor (i.e., sea bottom). In your home, hot air rises, so the warmest air accumulates near the ceiling. As you descend from the ceiling, the air becomes cooler. The coldest air can be found at floor level. And so it is with the ocean. Warm surface waters lie atop deeper, cold waters.


    This page titled 11.6: Visualizing Layers- The XZ Graph 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.