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  • The ocean conveyor belt and the Gulf Stream.

  • Ocean currents have a direct influence on our lives.

  • They determine our weather, our climate, and much more.

  • The ocean currents and wind systems

  • transport heat from the equator to the poles

  • and operate like a large engine for the global climate.

  • In the oceans, there are numerous currents.

  • The so-called ocean conveyor belt is very important for our climate.

  • This term describes a combination of currents

  • that result in four of the five global oceans exchanging water with each other.

  • They form a worldwide circulation system.

  • The conveyor belt is also called the thermohaline circulation,

  • withthermoreferring to the temperature,

  • andhalineto the salt content of the water.

  • Both determine the density of the water.

  • While the masses of water may be moved in part by wind,

  • primarily the different densities of the global oceans are

  • responsible for their movement.

  • Warm water has a lower density and rises while cold water sinks.

  • The water’s density also increases with a higher salt content.

  • At the equator the heat from the sun is especially strong,

  • resulting in a lot of evaporation and thus a rise in the water’s salt content.

  • That is where the Gulf Stream begins.

  • The Gulf Stream is very important for the European climate.

  • Its length of 10,000 km makes it one of the largest and fastest currents on Earth,

  • and it’s very warm.

  • At roughly 2 m/s it brings up to 100,000,000 m³ of water per second

  • towards Europe.

  • A constantly blowing wind, the southeast trade wind,

  • drives warm surface water to the northwest, into the

  • Gulf of Mexico, where it heats up to 30 °C.

  • The turning of the Earth and the west winds then direct

  • the Gulf Stream towards Europe and split it up.

  • One part flows south, another east to the Canary Current,

  • and a third part flows north where it releases a lot of heat

  • into the atmosphere as the North Atlantic Current.

  • The water becomes colder there.

  • Its salt content and density rise on the account of evaporation

  • and it drops down between Greenland, Norway, and Iceland.

  • There we also find the largest waterfall on Earth.

  • The so-called Chimneys, roughly 15-km-wide pillars with water falling up to 4,000 m.

  • 17,000,000 m³ of water per second, or roughly 15 times more water than

  • is carried by all the rivers in the world.

  • This creates a strong maelstrom, which constantly pulls in new water

  • and is the reason that the Gulf Stream moves towards Europe.

  • Countless species use the Gulf Stream as a means of transport on their trips

  • from the Caribbean to northern areas.

  • But it doesn’t just bring us animals;

  • an enormous quantity of warm air also comes with it.

  • In order to produce the same heat that it brings to the shores of Europe,

  • we would need 1,000,000 nuclear power plants.

  • That’s why we also call the Gulf Stream a heat pump.

  • Without it, the temperature would be significantly colder here,

  • at least five to ten degrees.

  • Instead of lush fields, we would have long winters and sparse ice-covered

  • landscapes in Europe.

  • In the last few years, scientists and pundits in the media have repeatedly

  • expressed the fear that the Gulf Stream could come to a standstill

  • due to climate change.

  • Because if the polar caps actually melt, the salt content in the water

  • off Greenland would fall, as would its density.

  • The North Atlantic Current would no longer be heavy enough,

  • and so it woundn’t sink as usual.

  • In the worst case, that would bring the Gulf Stream, our heat pump, to a stop.

  • Some climate experts also assume that climate change could

  • compensate for this effect.

  • We know that it can be normal for the climate to change

  • by looking at the development of the Earth over the last few million years.

  • There are ice ages and warm periods.

  • In the last ice age, a gigantic flood of melting water crippled

  • the heat-bringing North Atlantic Current, covering the northern hemisphere in ice.

  • Scientists have different views on the impact that climate change will have

  • on the global ocean conveyor belt, but one thing is clear:

  • when the climate changes, then the complex system of ocean currents and winds,

  • which has remained fairly stable since the last ice age,

  • will change in ways that we don’t yet understand.

  • Subtitles by the Amara.org community

The ocean conveyor belt and the Gulf Stream.

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