Hmmm--as someone else said, that could be a pretty long answer; here's a couple of major impacts off the top of my head:
1. Ocean currents; for a variety of reasons, ocean currents are either cold or warm in character, and so when storms move over these currents or when land is next to these currents, the temperature of the currents exerts an influence. For example, England is at about the same latitude as Canada, but has a much, much warmer climate, because the Gulf Stream (warm) flows past England, keeping it fairly temperate. Likewise, when a hurricane moves over the Gulf Stream (hurricanes love warm water!), hurricanes can very, very quickly intensify--as I recall, this happened just before Hurricane Andrew moved ashore.
2. Humidity and wind: areas that are near oceans (usually) experience higher humidity and rainfall because there is such a large body of water nearby which is constantly evaporating, moving over land, and then falling out as precipitation; also, oceans warm up and cool down slower than land, so that typically causes wind to move from on-shore to off-shore during the day, and from off-shore to on-shore during the night.
3. El Nino--this is basically an anomoly in the Pacific Ocean that develops during the winter, and basically throws everything off kilter, all over the world. It's pretty complicated, but can cause abnormal flooding, droughts, mild temperatures, etc.
Hope this helps!
2006-10-02 14:52:30
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answer #1
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answered by faithcmbs9 2
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Oceans ARE the earth's weather.
Two thirds of the surface of our planet is covered in water.That's alot of real estate snatching up the sunshine.
Water absorbs and releases heat (from our sun) like nothing else.Think about it. The continents don't circulate like our oceans,nor do they trap and let go of their heat like large quantities of water do.
All that water moving around and redistrubitng heat is the main factor in our global climate.
2006-10-02 14:39:45
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answer #2
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answered by Danny 5
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Well a detailed answer would be kind of long but in a nutshell they help cool the atmosphere which the temperature changes create the weather. There is also the evaporation of water to form clouds and we all know what clouds bring. :)
2006-10-02 14:25:53
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answer #3
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answered by mute8s 2
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Basically the oceans are the ones in charge of distributing the temperatures around the globe. And are the ones which start the water cicle.
2006-10-02 14:27:17
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answer #4
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answered by Roberto F 2
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Mostly by regulating it (creating a balance), however weather is caused by the sun because of uneven heating of the earths surface.
2006-10-02 14:35:42
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answer #5
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answered by Kelly L 5
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Venus and the Earth began off with genuinely an same bulk composition, yet with one important large difference. Venus shaped in the course of the daylight than Earth did, and at the same time as the daylight powered as a lot because it really is present day brightness, Earth got here across itself contained in the zone round it the position liquid water became reliable, Venus became no longer. Water began to be pushed into the better ecosystem, the position image voltaic UV radiation dissociated it into hydrogen and oxygen. The hydrogen rapidly escaped and the oxygen blended with the floor rocks. The steamy ecosystem also kick began a runaway greenhouse result, and volcanism persevered to pump CO2 and SO2 into the ambience. This vicious circle persevered till Venus's primordial oceans boiled away. on the early Earth, an same volume of CO2 exists in spite of the indisputable fact that it dissolved into the oceans the position it shaped carbonate rocks like limestones. On Venus, those carbonate rocks broke down and released their CO2 to the ambience. on the earth, the CO2 became also getting used by skill of early lifeforms to potential photosynthesis, eliminating yet better CO2 from the ambience. On Venus, the CO2 had no position to bypass except the ambience, and when you consider that it really is concentration grew the greenhouse result were given even stronger. After the oceans boiled away, all yet adequate of Venus' water to hide it to a intensity of below an inch baked out of the crust and higher mantle. That small volume of last H2O will boost Venus' Hellish floor temperature better than 2 hundred ranges above what the thick CO2 ecosystem on my own would. So the quick version is CO2 dissolved into the oceans of Earth and shaped carbonate rocks and fed early life on the earth. On Venus, the CO2 became not in any respect sequestered from the ambience to the volume it really is been on the earth. at the same time as the planet fell sufferer to a runaway greenhouse result, all of it really is CO2 became released into the ambience the position it remained to at present.
2016-11-25 23:40:16
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answer #6
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answered by fullem 4
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