The "From Icefield to Ocean Poster" depicts the important linkages between glaciers and the ocean. The product is a result of Alaska Climate Science Center research projects and workshops.
Ocean and Climate
The USGS works to understand Earth’s history, past climate conditions, and to forecast climate change impacts. The ocean is an amazing repository for Earth’s climatic history. Earth’s ocean and climate are intrinsically connected and heavily influence one another in many ways. The USGS uses ocean geologic records to better understand current and future climate changes and potential impacts.
Changing climate influences many aspects of the ocean, from warming surface waters and altering ocean chemistry to affecting ecosystem function and health. The ocean and its circulation patterns are critical drivers of Earth’s climate and weather patterns.
With the ocean covering more than 70% of the Earth, it plays a large role in controlling the planet’s temperature. The ocean absorbs an enormous amount of heat from the sun—in fact, the top few meters alone store as much heat as the Earth’s atmosphere! As water is very good at storing heat, it spreads the heat around the planet through circulating currents driven by temperature and density differences. These global circulation patterns affect our daily weather and influence long-term climate patterns.
A Changing Ocean
As water heats up, it also expands in volume—a process known as thermal expansion—which causes sea levels to rise. As the Earth warms and cools, the volume of the ocean changes, affecting the volume of ice and land areas covered with ocean or ice. These changes can occur abruptly, such as during transitions from glacial to interglacial conditions, or over long periods of time. Learn more about sea level rise research here.
Changes in water temperatures, salinity and other chemical properties, can alter related circulation patterns. Altogether, these changes can also affect the behavior and physiology of many species by having profound impacts on the timing and availability and timing such as changing food webs, of food, reproduction and migratory patterns. Coral bleaching is one way corals respond to warming sea water temperatures.
The ocean also absorbs gases, which can affect its chemical properties. For example, as carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is absorbed by the ocean, it causes the pH to lower in a process called ocean acidification. Ocean acidification can lead to dissolution of the shells and skeletons of many marine organisms—including economically important shellfish in the seafood industry and ecologically important corals that support biodiversity. It can also dissolve carbonate sediment and alter seafloor elevation and form. USGS monitors the effects of ocean acidification on coastal and marine ecosystems to help inform efforts to mitigate these impacts.
USGS Ocean and Climate Research
Ocean science is critical to improving the understanding of Earth's inner workings. From remote-sensing to marine geology and paleoclimate analyses, USGS is an important partner with other federal agencies and international experts working to expand our knowledge about Earth's climate history, especially as related to current conditions. This science improves our ability to understand the factors that affect climate change as well as forecast future climate conditions, their potential impacts and how best to mitigate or adapt to them.
With remote-sensing technology, for example, cameras on satellites can make images of temperature shifts in the open ocean or monitor changes in the formation of sea ice at the poles. Remote-sensing also includes sonar systems on ships, which can be used to create images of the ocean floor and uncover clues about past climatic conditions: USGS researchers studying iceberg tracks, or scours, on the Atlantic seafloor found that during the Last Glacial Period 30,000 years ago, icebergs perhaps as tall as the Eiffel Tower drifted south along the Atlantic coast of North America, ferried along by cold-water currents created during periods of catastrophic glacial melting.
The USGS develops and uses innovative methods to measure climatic and oceanic conditions throughout Earth’s history including sea surface and bottom water temperatures, salinity, relative sea level, precipitation patterns, oceanic productivity, and terrestrial inputs to the ocean system. Data on past climatic conditions in the oceans—the study of geologic records known as paleoceanography—can be combined with data on current conditions to try to predict how our ocean will affect Earth’s future climate patterns.
In order to understand the past, USGS scientists analyze “proxies” which serve to indicate past conditions through biological or geological evidence. Some proxies include marine sediment and organisms that secrete their shells from seawater such as plankton, clams, and corals. Proxies for seawater geochemistry reflect the environmental conditions when and where they were formed. These proxies obtained in geologic deposits serve as archives that can be used to reconstruct Earth’s historic conditions so we can better predict what changes might occur in the future.
Publications
Comparison of sediment composition by smear slides to quantitative shipboard data: A case study on the utility of smear slide percent estimates, IODP Expedition 353, northern Indian Ocean
A characterization of deep-sea coral and sponge communities along the California and Oregon coast using a remotely operated vehicle on the EXPRESS 2018 expedition
Contribution of deep-sourced carbon from hydrocarbon seeps to sedimentary organic carbon: Evidence from radiocarbon and stable isotope geochemistry
Rebounds, regresses, and recovery: A 15-year study of the coral reef community at Pila‘a, Kaua‘i after decades of natural and anthropogenic stress events
Bomb-produced radiocarbon across the South Pacific Gyre — A new record from American Samoa with utility for fisheries science
Science
Pacific Islands Climate Adaptation Science Center (PI-CASC): Adapting Together
The Impact of Sea-Level Rise and Climate Change on Pacific Ocean Atolls
Paleoclimate Proxies
Paleoclimate Research
Ecosystems: EXPRESS
Multimedia
The "From Icefield to Ocean Poster" depicts the important linkages between glaciers and the ocean. The product is a result of Alaska Climate Science Center research projects and workshops.
Steep watersheds with dramatic environmental gradients are common features of both the Pacific Islands and Southeast Alaska.
Steep watersheds with dramatic environmental gradients are common features of both the Pacific Islands and Southeast Alaska.
Figure 3. Map of the North Atlantic Ocean illustrating the approximate path of the Gulf Stream / North Atlantic Current system.
Figure 3. Map of the North Atlantic Ocean illustrating the approximate path of the Gulf Stream / North Atlantic Current system.
The USGS Gas Hydrates Project develops and tests new tools to address the critical knowledge gaps identified as scientists analyze hydrate-bearing pressure cores recovered during field programs.
The USGS Gas Hydrates Project develops and tests new tools to address the critical knowledge gaps identified as scientists analyze hydrate-bearing pressure cores recovered during field programs.
The USGS Gas Hydrates Project manages the standalone Hydrate Pressure Core Analysis Laboratory (HyPrCAL) at the Woods Hole Coastal and Marine Science Center (WHCMSC) to study hydrate-bearing sediments in support of energy resources a
The USGS Gas Hydrates Project manages the standalone Hydrate Pressure Core Analysis Laboratory (HyPrCAL) at the Woods Hole Coastal and Marine Science Center (WHCMSC) to study hydrate-bearing sediments in support of energy resources a
Timing is Everything: How Fish and Wildlife are Responding to Climate Change Through Shifts in the Timing of Life Events
Timing is Everything: How Fish and Wildlife are Responding to Climate Change Through Shifts in the Timing of Life Events
One of the coral species most susceptible to stony coral tissue loss disease show active lesions of the disease around St. John.
One of the coral species most susceptible to stony coral tissue loss disease show active lesions of the disease around St. John.
Razorbill with Atlantic herring in bill on Seal Island National Wildlife Refuge.
Razorbill with Atlantic herring in bill on Seal Island National Wildlife Refuge.
USGS scientist Summer Praetorius of the Geology, Minerals, Energy, & Geophysics (GMEG) Science Center collects samples from an ocean sediment core in the Pacific Ocean Paleoclimatology Lab at Menlo Park, CA. The sediment core is from Tanner Basin, located about 200 miles due west of San Diego in the eastern Pacific Ocean.
USGS scientist Summer Praetorius of the Geology, Minerals, Energy, & Geophysics (GMEG) Science Center collects samples from an ocean sediment core in the Pacific Ocean Paleoclimatology Lab at Menlo Park, CA. The sediment core is from Tanner Basin, located about 200 miles due west of San Diego in the eastern Pacific Ocean.
News
Marine clams shed light on past climate patterns of the North Atlantic
The Future of Climate Change on Coastal Biodiversity in the Boston Harbor Islands
Sediment Trap in Gulf of Mexico Recovered for the Last Time, Marking the Culmination of a 12-year Time Series of Climate Data Collection
Considerations for Globigerinoides ruber (white and pink) paleoceanography: Comprehensive insights from a long‐running sediment trap
The planktonic foraminiferal response to the Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum on the Atlantic coastal plain
A 50-year Sr/Ca time series from an enclosed, shallow-water Guam coral: In situ monitoring and extraction of a temperature trend, annual cycle, and ENSO and PDO signals
Quantifying uncertainty in Sr/Ca-based estimates of SST from the coral Orbicella faveolata
Evidence for shelf acidification during the onset of the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum
PRISM marine sites—The history of PRISM sea surface temperature estimation
Increased hurricane frequency near Florida during Younger Dryas Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation slowdown
The role of paleoecology in restoration and resource management—The past as a guide to future decision-making: Review and example from the Greater Everglades Ecosystem, U.S.A
On the importance of stratigraphic control for vertebrate fossil sites in Channel Islands National Park, California, USA: Examples from new Mammuthus finds on San Miguel Island
Fluvial system response to late Pleistocene-Holocene sea-level change on Santa Rosa Island, Channel Islands National Park, California
Reconstructing surface ocean circulation with 129I time series records from corals
Rapidly spreading seagrass invades the Caribbean with unknown ecological consequences
Sea-Level Rise Hazards and Decision Support
Marine Climate History
Pacific Ocean Patterns, Processes, and Productivity (POP3): Impacts of ancient warming on marine ecosystems and western North America
Sea Level and Storm Hazards: Past and Present
The Impact of Climate Change and Sea-Level Rise on Future Flooding of Coastal Parks and Refuges in Hawaiʻi and the U.S. Affiliated Pacific Islands
Geological Investigations of the Neogene
Land-Sea Linkages in the Arctic
U.S. Geological Survey Gas Hydrates Project
Sea Level Rise and Climate: Impacts on the Greater Everglades Ecosystem and Restoration
Sea Level and Climate
Coral Reefs as Climate Archives
Paleoclimate Reconstruction from Marine and Lake Sediments
Data and calculations to support the study of the sea-air flux of methane and carbon dioxide on the West Spitsbergen margin in June 2014
GDGT and Alkenone Flux in the Northern Gulf of Mexico
Data compilation of soil respiration, moisture, and temperature measurements from global warming experiments from 1994-2014
The USGS works to understand Earth’s history, past climate conditions, and to forecast climate change impacts. The ocean is an amazing repository for Earth’s climatic history. Earth’s ocean and climate are intrinsically connected and heavily influence one another in many ways. The USGS uses ocean geologic records to better understand current and future climate changes and potential impacts.
Changing climate influences many aspects of the ocean, from warming surface waters and altering ocean chemistry to affecting ecosystem function and health. The ocean and its circulation patterns are critical drivers of Earth’s climate and weather patterns.
With the ocean covering more than 70% of the Earth, it plays a large role in controlling the planet’s temperature. The ocean absorbs an enormous amount of heat from the sun—in fact, the top few meters alone store as much heat as the Earth’s atmosphere! As water is very good at storing heat, it spreads the heat around the planet through circulating currents driven by temperature and density differences. These global circulation patterns affect our daily weather and influence long-term climate patterns.
A Changing Ocean
As water heats up, it also expands in volume—a process known as thermal expansion—which causes sea levels to rise. As the Earth warms and cools, the volume of the ocean changes, affecting the volume of ice and land areas covered with ocean or ice. These changes can occur abruptly, such as during transitions from glacial to interglacial conditions, or over long periods of time. Learn more about sea level rise research here.
Changes in water temperatures, salinity and other chemical properties, can alter related circulation patterns. Altogether, these changes can also affect the behavior and physiology of many species by having profound impacts on the timing and availability and timing such as changing food webs, of food, reproduction and migratory patterns. Coral bleaching is one way corals respond to warming sea water temperatures.
The ocean also absorbs gases, which can affect its chemical properties. For example, as carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is absorbed by the ocean, it causes the pH to lower in a process called ocean acidification. Ocean acidification can lead to dissolution of the shells and skeletons of many marine organisms—including economically important shellfish in the seafood industry and ecologically important corals that support biodiversity. It can also dissolve carbonate sediment and alter seafloor elevation and form. USGS monitors the effects of ocean acidification on coastal and marine ecosystems to help inform efforts to mitigate these impacts.
USGS Ocean and Climate Research
Ocean science is critical to improving the understanding of Earth's inner workings. From remote-sensing to marine geology and paleoclimate analyses, USGS is an important partner with other federal agencies and international experts working to expand our knowledge about Earth's climate history, especially as related to current conditions. This science improves our ability to understand the factors that affect climate change as well as forecast future climate conditions, their potential impacts and how best to mitigate or adapt to them.
With remote-sensing technology, for example, cameras on satellites can make images of temperature shifts in the open ocean or monitor changes in the formation of sea ice at the poles. Remote-sensing also includes sonar systems on ships, which can be used to create images of the ocean floor and uncover clues about past climatic conditions: USGS researchers studying iceberg tracks, or scours, on the Atlantic seafloor found that during the Last Glacial Period 30,000 years ago, icebergs perhaps as tall as the Eiffel Tower drifted south along the Atlantic coast of North America, ferried along by cold-water currents created during periods of catastrophic glacial melting.
The USGS develops and uses innovative methods to measure climatic and oceanic conditions throughout Earth’s history including sea surface and bottom water temperatures, salinity, relative sea level, precipitation patterns, oceanic productivity, and terrestrial inputs to the ocean system. Data on past climatic conditions in the oceans—the study of geologic records known as paleoceanography—can be combined with data on current conditions to try to predict how our ocean will affect Earth’s future climate patterns.
In order to understand the past, USGS scientists analyze “proxies” which serve to indicate past conditions through biological or geological evidence. Some proxies include marine sediment and organisms that secrete their shells from seawater such as plankton, clams, and corals. Proxies for seawater geochemistry reflect the environmental conditions when and where they were formed. These proxies obtained in geologic deposits serve as archives that can be used to reconstruct Earth’s historic conditions so we can better predict what changes might occur in the future.
Publications
Comparison of sediment composition by smear slides to quantitative shipboard data: A case study on the utility of smear slide percent estimates, IODP Expedition 353, northern Indian Ocean
A characterization of deep-sea coral and sponge communities along the California and Oregon coast using a remotely operated vehicle on the EXPRESS 2018 expedition
Contribution of deep-sourced carbon from hydrocarbon seeps to sedimentary organic carbon: Evidence from radiocarbon and stable isotope geochemistry
Rebounds, regresses, and recovery: A 15-year study of the coral reef community at Pila‘a, Kaua‘i after decades of natural and anthropogenic stress events
Bomb-produced radiocarbon across the South Pacific Gyre — A new record from American Samoa with utility for fisheries science
Science
Pacific Islands Climate Adaptation Science Center (PI-CASC): Adapting Together
The Impact of Sea-Level Rise and Climate Change on Pacific Ocean Atolls
Paleoclimate Proxies
Paleoclimate Research
Ecosystems: EXPRESS
Multimedia
The "From Icefield to Ocean Poster" depicts the important linkages between glaciers and the ocean. The product is a result of Alaska Climate Science Center research projects and workshops.
The "From Icefield to Ocean Poster" depicts the important linkages between glaciers and the ocean. The product is a result of Alaska Climate Science Center research projects and workshops.
Steep watersheds with dramatic environmental gradients are common features of both the Pacific Islands and Southeast Alaska.
Steep watersheds with dramatic environmental gradients are common features of both the Pacific Islands and Southeast Alaska.
Figure 3. Map of the North Atlantic Ocean illustrating the approximate path of the Gulf Stream / North Atlantic Current system.
Figure 3. Map of the North Atlantic Ocean illustrating the approximate path of the Gulf Stream / North Atlantic Current system.
The USGS Gas Hydrates Project develops and tests new tools to address the critical knowledge gaps identified as scientists analyze hydrate-bearing pressure cores recovered during field programs.
The USGS Gas Hydrates Project develops and tests new tools to address the critical knowledge gaps identified as scientists analyze hydrate-bearing pressure cores recovered during field programs.
The USGS Gas Hydrates Project manages the standalone Hydrate Pressure Core Analysis Laboratory (HyPrCAL) at the Woods Hole Coastal and Marine Science Center (WHCMSC) to study hydrate-bearing sediments in support of energy resources a
The USGS Gas Hydrates Project manages the standalone Hydrate Pressure Core Analysis Laboratory (HyPrCAL) at the Woods Hole Coastal and Marine Science Center (WHCMSC) to study hydrate-bearing sediments in support of energy resources a
Timing is Everything: How Fish and Wildlife are Responding to Climate Change Through Shifts in the Timing of Life Events
Timing is Everything: How Fish and Wildlife are Responding to Climate Change Through Shifts in the Timing of Life Events
One of the coral species most susceptible to stony coral tissue loss disease show active lesions of the disease around St. John.
One of the coral species most susceptible to stony coral tissue loss disease show active lesions of the disease around St. John.
Razorbill with Atlantic herring in bill on Seal Island National Wildlife Refuge.
Razorbill with Atlantic herring in bill on Seal Island National Wildlife Refuge.
USGS scientist Summer Praetorius of the Geology, Minerals, Energy, & Geophysics (GMEG) Science Center collects samples from an ocean sediment core in the Pacific Ocean Paleoclimatology Lab at Menlo Park, CA. The sediment core is from Tanner Basin, located about 200 miles due west of San Diego in the eastern Pacific Ocean.
USGS scientist Summer Praetorius of the Geology, Minerals, Energy, & Geophysics (GMEG) Science Center collects samples from an ocean sediment core in the Pacific Ocean Paleoclimatology Lab at Menlo Park, CA. The sediment core is from Tanner Basin, located about 200 miles due west of San Diego in the eastern Pacific Ocean.