Editorial, J Mar Biol Oceanogr Vol: 10 Issue: 6
Chemical Oceanography and the Ocean's Central Investigations
Maty Luna*
Editorial Office, Journal of Marine Biology and Oceanography, London, United Kingdom
*Corresponding Author: Maty Luna Editorial Office Journal of Marine Biology and Oceanography London, United Kingdom E-mail: maty_luna@hotmail.com
Received: May 20, 2021 Accepted: May 27, 2021 Published: May 30, 2021
Abstract
Chemical Oceanography is a type of incorporative oceanography. Marine circulation, weather, the plants and animals that live in the ocean and material exchange with the aerosphere, cryosphere, continents, and mantle all have a role in the ocean's chemistry. The Chemical Oceanography's study areas reflect this diversification of influences on the ocean's chemistry. The final source of chemical individuals in the sea is mostly rivers, which transport their liquefied and particulate intake through estuaries. This is the site of the ocean's closest encounter with humans, as well as a unique example of Puget Sound. The flux of biologically introduced organic materials from the euphotic zone is the primary source of most chemical changes in the sea. The sink for anthropogenically produced greenhouse gases is the gas exchange at the air-water interface.