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13: Ocean Waves

  • Page ID
    31582
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    Sit on the shore of the ocean and what do you see? Waves. Surf. Foam. Close your eyes and listen. What do you hear? The crashing of waves. What do you feel? The vibrations of surf pounding against the beach. Draw in a deep breath. What do you taste and smell? The salty air of an ocean alive with waves. Waves stimulate all of our senses simultaneously. Perhaps that’s why they have fascinated mankind since the dawn of time.

    If any one phenomenon of the sea can define it, it might be waves. They rock ships, wash upon their decks, and crack against their hulls. Where waves come into contact with the seafloor and reach an unstable height, a wave begins to break—this is surf. High surf crashes against lighthouses, piers, and buildings, and occasionally destroys them.

    But rather than fear the destructive force of waves, humans fashioned planks from trees and paddled them out to meet them head-on. Surfing—the use of various types of boards (or your body) to ride waves—certainly ranks as one of the more exhilirating sports. A surfer on a wave experiences a rush of moving energy unlike any other on Earth. And people watching from the beach get to marvel at the speed and agility of a surfer cutting up the waves or whooshing out of a barrel. Though its historical roots date back hundreds of years in Polynesia and Peru (Warshaw 2011), surfing in modern times generates billions of dollars in surfing activities, fashions, vacations, movies, magazines, décor, and a lot more (Statista 2022).

    To explore these topics, we follow the timeless words of oceanographer Willard Bascom (1916–2000) and his classic book, Waves and Beaches, first published in 1964 (updated: Bascom and McCoy 2021). We’ll add other references as needed. But now, let’s catch some waves. Cowabunga!


    This page titled 13: Ocean Waves 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.