If the current from the ocean moves west why does it go north?
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The winds pull surface water with them, creating currents. As these currents flow westward, the Coriolis effect—a force that results from the rotation of the Earth—deflects them. The currents then bend to the right, heading north
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Major surface ocean currents in the open ocean, however, are set in motion by the wind, which drags on the surface of the water as it blows
Explanation:
The winds pull surface water with them, creating currents. As these currents flow westward, the Coriolis effect, a force that results from the rotation of the Earth-- deflects them.
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