WORLD
Learn more about “The Geography of Ocean Currents” with our activity.
Teachers, scroll down for a quick list of key resources, including today’s MapMaker Interactive map, in our Teachers’ Toolkit.
Note: Current Event Connections is slowing down for the summer. Our column will continue to appear once or twice a week until mid-August. If you have an idea for a Current Event Connection, a recommendation for a good read, or want to share one of your MapMaker Interactive maps, let us know in the comments!

Discussion Ideas
Read through our activity “The Geography of Ocean Currents.” Adapt its first set of questions to the Nat Geo News article.
- What are ocean currents?
- Ocean currents are steady, predictable flows of water in the ocean. Take a look at our beautiful map layer on the world’s warm and cool ocean currents.
- What factors do you think affect ocean currents?
- Wind and sea-surface temperatures influence the flow of ocean currents.
- In addition, according to Nat Geo News, currents can be impacted by “micro-changes” such as storms, unusual atmospheric activity, and seasonal fluctuations, such as the powerful southeast Asian monsoon.
- Wind and sea-surface temperatures influence the flow of ocean currents.
- Debris from Malaysian Airlines Flight 370 was recently recovered on a beach on Reunion Island. The debris assured searchers they are looking in the right area for the downed plane. They are searching about 2,012 kilometers (1,250 miles) southwest of Perth, Australia. In what direction do you think debris from Flight 370 drifted? Take a look at today’s MapMaker Interactive map for a general idea about the enormous search zone and ocean currents in bookmark 2.
- Debris followed a predictable counter-clockwise path, following the warm currents of the Indian Ocean.
- The currents are so familiar that one expert, interviewed by Nat Geo News, accurately predicted that debris from Flight 370 would show up in Madagascar a year after the plane’s disappearance. (As it turns out, the debris bumped into the French island of Reunion before it could reach Madagascar.)
- Debris followed a predictable counter-clockwise path, following the warm currents of the Indian Ocean.
- One oceanographer interviewed in the Nat Geo News article does not actually refer to ocean currents. He talks about the Indian Ocean gyre. What is a gyre? Take a look at our encyclopedic entry for some help.
- An ocean gyre is a large system of circular ocean currents.
- The gyre that carried debris from Flight 370 is described by one expert in the Nat Geo News article: “A very large anti-clockwise rotating current sweeps right up the west coast of Australia and into the tropics, where it heads west . . . It is these very same currents and winds that the sailors of old used in the spice trade, making use of this superhighway to get from Europe to the East Indies and back again.” (Learn more about the spice trade’s superhighway with this video and map.)
- An ocean gyre is a large system of circular ocean currents.
- How does the discovery of the Boeing 777 debris influence the search for Flight 370?
- Oceanographers, engineers, and climatologists were able to accurately predict the flow of debris from the general search area a year ago. Recovery of at least one piece of debris confirms that searchers are looking in the right place.
- What are searchers’ next steps?
- Keep looking in the same area—a huge, stormy, isolated area of the Indian Ocean. Learn more about the recovery effort here.
- At least one oceanographer encourages searchers to comb the beaches of Reunion Island, Madagascar, and East African countries such as Tanzania, Mozambique, and South Africa. According to Nat Geo News, “One truism of aircraft investigations is this: If one piece of debris is found, there will be others.”
TEACHERS’ TOOLKIT
Nat Geo: How a Piece of Malaysian Flight 370 Drifted 2,300 Miles article
Nat Geo: The Geography of Ocean Currents activity
Nat Geo: Malaysian Airlines Flight 370 map
Nat Geo: What is an ocean gyre? encyclopedic entry
BBC: MH370: Behind the tenacious deep-sea hunt for missing plane
Currents and water temperatures… Do these explain the seaweed invasion in the Caribbean? Some are seeing it as God’s payback for us being negligent humans, while others are suggesting global warming, and still others say it’s a natural phenomenon. Ideas?