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Required to be done before Class: tba
Can be done before or after class: tba
Required to be done after class: tba Merit Badge
Requirements:
- Name four branches of oceanography. Describe at least five reasons why it is important for people to learn about the oceans.
- Define salinity, temperature, and density, and describe how these
important properties of seawater are measured by the physical
oceanographer. Discuss the circulation and currents of the ocean.
Describe the effects of the oceans on weather and climate.
- Describe the characteristics of ocean waves. Point out the
differences among the storm surge, tsunami, tidal wave, and tidal bore.
Explain the difference between sea, swell, and surf. Explain how
breakers are formed.
- Draw a cross-section of underwater topography. Show what is meant by:
- continental shelf
- continental slope
- abyssal plain
Name and put on your drawing the following: seamount, guyot, rift
valley, canyon, trench, and oceanic ridge. Compare the depths in the
oceans with the heights of mountains on land.
- List the main salts, gases, and nutrients in seawater.
Describe some important properties of water. Tell how the animals and
plants of the ocean affect the chemical composition of seawater.
Explain how differences in evaporation and precipitation affect the
salt content of the oceans.
- Describe some of the biologically important properties of
seawater. Define benthos, nekton, and plankton. Name some of the
plants and animals that make up each of these groups. Describe the
place and importance of phytoplankton in the oceanic food chain.
- Do ONE of the following:
- Make a plankton
net.* Tow the net by a dock, wade with it, hold it in a current, or tow
it from a rowboat. Do this for about 20 minutes. Save the sample.
Examine it under a microscope or high-power glass. Identify the three
most common types of plankton in the sample.
- Make a
series of models (clay or plaster and wood) of a volcanic island. Show
the growth of an atoll from a fringing reef through a barrier reef.
Describe the Darwinian theory of coral reef formation.
-
Measure the water temperature at the surface, midwater, and bottom of a
body of water four times daily for five consecutive days. You may
measure depth with a rock tied to a line. Make a Secchi disk to measure
turbidity (how much suspended sedimentation is in the water). Measure
the air temperature. Note the cloud cover and roughness of the water.
Show your findings (air and water temperature, turbidity) on a graph.
Tell how the water temperature changes with air temperature.
-
Make a model showing the inshore sediment movement by littoral
currents, tidal movement, and wave action. Include such formations as
high and low waterlines, low-tide terrace, berm, and coastal cliffs.
Show how offshore bars are built up and torn down.
- Make
a wave generator. Show reflection and refraction of waves. Show how
groins, jetties, and breakwaters affect these patterns.
-
Track and monitor satellite images available on the Internet for a
specific location for three weeks. Describe what you have learned to
your counselor.
- Do ONE of the following:
- Write a 500-word report on a book about oceanography approved by your counselor.
- Visit one of the following:
- Oceanographic research ship
- Oceanographic institute
Write a 500-word report about your visit. -
Explain to your troop in a five-minute prepared speech "Why
Oceanography Is Important" or describe "Career Opportunities in
Oceanography." (Before making your speech, show your speech outline to
your counselor for approval.)
- Describe four methods that marine scientists use to investigate
the ocean, underlying geology, and organisms living in the water.
*May be done in lakes or streams.
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