150 '^'HE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE SEA. 



CHAPTER VIII. 



THE SALTS OF THE SEA. 



What the Salt in the Sea Water has to do with the Currents in the Ocean, <5> 289. — 

 Reasons for supposing the Sea to have its system of Circulation, 290. — Arguments 

 furnished by Coral Islands, 293. — W^hat would be the Effect of no system of Cir- 

 culation for Sea Water "? 295. — Its Components, 297. — The principal Agents from 

 which Dynamical Force in the Sea is derived, 300. — Illustration, 302. — Sea and 

 Fresh Water have different Laws of Expansion, 308. — The Gulf Stream could not 

 exist in a Sea of fresh Water, 309. — The effect of Evaporation in producing Cur- 

 rents, 310. — How the Polar Sea is supplied with Salt, 323. — The Influence of this 

 imder Current upon open Water in the Frozen Ocean, 326. — Sea Shells : The 

 Influence exerted by them upon Currents, 330. — Order among them, 335. — They 

 assist in regulating Climates, 336. — How Sea Shells and Salts act as Compensa- 

 tions in the Machinery by which Oceanic Circulation is conducted, 339. — Whence 

 come the Salts of the Sea 1 344. 



288. In order to comprehend aright the currents of the sea, and 

 to study with advantage its physical adaptations, it is necessary to 

 understand the effects produced by the salts of the sea upon the 

 equilibrium of its waters ; for wherever equilibrium be destroyed, 

 whether in the air or water (§ 276), it is restored by motion, and 

 motion among fluid particles gives rise to currents, w^hich, in turn, 

 constitute circulation. 



This chapter is therefore added as -a sort of supplement, which 

 will assist us in elucidating what has been advanced concerning 

 the currents of the sea. 



289. The question is often asked, " Why is the sea salt ?" I 

 think it can be shown that the circulation of the ocean depends, 

 in a great measure, upon the salts of sea water ; certainly its in 

 fluences upon climate are greatly extended by reason of its salt- 

 ness. 



As a general rule, the sea is nearly of a uniform degree of salt- 

 ness, and the constituents of sea water are as constant in their 

 proportions as are the components of the atmosphere. It is true 

 that we sometimes come across arms of the sea, or places in the 

 ocean, where we find the water more salt or less salt than sea 



