Rouse Company Foundation Student Services Building

PHYS-120 Oceanography

Students will be introduced to the four major disciplines in ocean sciences: geological, chemical, biological, and physical oceanography in order to understand important linkages among physical oceanography and the other oceanographic disciplines—marine biology, chemical oceanography, and marine geology. In addition, the course will discuss human use of, impact on, and management of the oceans. For Oceanography Laboratory, see PHYS-121.

Credits

3

Hours Weekly

3 hours weekly

Course Objectives

  1. 1. Analyze and describe the dominant physical processes in the ocean system.
  2. 2. Analyze the interrelated nature between the ocean and atmospheres’ chemical and physical
    processes and the effects these have on the ocean system.
  3. 3. Apply scientific principles, scientific reasoning, and appropriate mathematical techniques to
    solve problems pertaining to the study of physical oceanographic variables in order to solve
    problems and analyze solutions in a variety of situations.
  4. 4. Analyze how the ocean system developed and how it and its inhabitants have evolved and
    changed and the processes involved in the change over the past three billion years.
  5. 5. Examine the adaptive features of marine organisms and the roles these features play in the
    organism’s survival and success in unique ecosystems.
  6. 6. Communicate oceanographic concepts using appropriate symbols, notation, and
    vocabulary.
  7. 7. Analyze and debate the problems and issues associated with the ocean systems and
    synthesizing real-world ocean management problems including, but not limited to, coastline
    management, ocean pollution (on a local to global scale), overfishing, and climate change,
    including those associated with El Nino and La Nina.

Course Objectives

  1. 1. Analyze and describe the dominant physical processes in the ocean system.
  2. 2. Analyze the interrelated nature between the ocean and atmospheres’ chemical and physical
    processes and the effects these have on the ocean system.
  3. 3. Apply scientific principles, scientific reasoning, and appropriate mathematical techniques to
    solve problems pertaining to the study of physical oceanographic variables in order to solve
    problems and analyze solutions in a variety of situations.
  4. 4. Analyze how the ocean system developed and how it and its inhabitants have evolved and
    changed and the processes involved in the change over the past three billion years.
  5. 5. Examine the adaptive features of marine organisms and the roles these features play in the
    organism’s survival and success in unique ecosystems.
  6. 6. Communicate oceanographic concepts using appropriate symbols, notation, and
    vocabulary.
  7. 7. Analyze and debate the problems and issues associated with the ocean systems and
    synthesizing real-world ocean management problems including, but not limited to, coastline
    management, ocean pollution (on a local to global scale), overfishing, and climate change,
    including those associated with El Nino and La Nina.