What are density currents?

Density currents are heavy water moving under lighter water, just like when you pour a cold drink into a warm one and it sinks to the bottom.

Imagine you're in a bathtub with warm water, and you pour in some ice-cold soda. The soda doesn’t mix right away, it stays on the bottom because it's colder and denser than the warm water. That’s a density current in action!

Why It Happens

Cold water is heavier than warm water, so it moves down like a slide. Warm water is lighter, so it floats up. This movement happens all around the world, in oceans and lakes.

A Real-Life Example

Think about when you stir your soup. The hot soup from the bottom rises to the top, while the cooler soup at the top sinks down. It’s like a dance between hot and cold, making the whole pot of soup move!

Density currents help mix up oceans and lakes, it's how nutrients and heat travel around the world!

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Examples

  1. A cold, salty river flowing under the warmer ocean water.
  2. A heavy layer of water sinking to the bottom of the sea.
  3. A deep current that moves like a slow river beneath the surface.

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