Vertical movement of ocean waters The waters of lakes, seas and oceans of the northern hemisphere rotate counterclockwise, while the waters of the southern hemisphere rotate clockwise, forming giant whirlpools. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ocean_gyre As you know, everything that rotates, including whirlpools, has the property of a gyro (yule) to maintain the vertical position of the axis in space, regardless of the rotation of the Earth. If you look at the Earth from the side of the Sun, the whirlpools, rotating together with the Earth, overturn, due to which the whirlpools precess, and as a result there is a vertical movement of oceanic waters. http://goo.gl/AM5g1s The presented theory can be easily verified by the connection between the oxygen content and the rotation speed of the whirlpools. Drawing on a map of the depths and currents of the seas and oceans. The higher the flow velocity, the greater the oxygen content and the lower the hydrogen sulfide content. List of seas with low oxygen content: Black Sea. East of the Mediterranean Sea. Gulf of Mexico. Fjords of Norway. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dead_zone_(ecology) https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/ocean-dead-zones/
The mixed waves enrich the water with oxygen only to a depth of several tens of meters of the surface of the seas and oceans, while the whirlpools deliver the water enriched with oxygen to a depth of more than 10 km. (Mariana Trench). As we see, whirlpools are involved not only in the horizontal circulation of the waters of the seas and oceans, but also in the vertical.
[QUOTE = "Gawdzilla Sama, post: 3553330, участник: 286784"] Я помешиваю стакан чая, чтобы получить его равномерно холодным. Ничего нового. [/ QUOTE] All of these theories are easy to test with hydrocollider. Hydrocollider - half-filled vessel with a rotating liquid (bucket, glass, bottle, mixer). If the liquid rotates in the right, then the bucket around itself (in orbit) must be rotated to the left.
Uh, that's not how you test a theory. You're demonstrating a simple concept - I doubt anyone doesn't understand how whirlpools work - but it says nothing about whether your theory is correct.