ABSTRACT

Covering 71 percent of the planet, these saline bodies of water provided the unique conditions necessary for the building blocks of life to form billions of years ago. This book explains how our oceans continue to support and influence life in important ways: by providing the largest global source of protein in the form of fish populations, by creating and influencing weather systems, and by absorbing waste streams such as airborne carbon. It is shown how oceans have an almost magnetic draw—almost half of the world’s population lives within a few hours of an ocean. Although oceans are vast in size, exceeding 328 million cubic miles (1.37 billion cubic kilometers), they have been influenced by and have influenced humans in numerous ways.

The book includes three detailed case studies. The first focuses on the most remote locations along the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, where new ocean floor is being formed twenty-thousand feet underwater. The second considers the Maldives, a string of islands in the Indian Ocean, where increasing sea levels may force residents to abandon some communities by 2020. The third describes the North Sea at the edge of the Arctic Ocean, where fishing stocks have been dangerously depleted as a result of multiple nations’ unrelenting removal of the smallest and largest species.

part |42 pages

Introduction to Oceans

chapter 1|18 pages

Oceans Around Us

chapter 2|12 pages

Humans and Oceans

chapter 3|10 pages

Ocean Locations

part |62 pages

Oceans of the World Case Studies

chapter 4|8 pages

Gulf of Alaska Pacific Ocean

chapter 5|8 pages

Mid-Atlantic Ridge Atlantic Ocean

chapter 6|8 pages

Maldive Islands Indian Ocean

chapter 7|8 pages

Antarctic Peninsula Southern Ocean

chapter 8|10 pages

North Sea Atlantic Ocean

chapter 9|8 pages

Hawaiian-Emperor Seamount Pacific Ocean

chapter 10|8 pages

Sargasso Sea Atlantic Ocean

part |20 pages

Oceans Conclusion

chapter 11|8 pages

State of the Oceans

chapter 12|10 pages

Future of the Oceans