Flipping through a textbook on ocean physics, many people are bound to be frustrated from the very beginning when they suddenly encounter partial differential equations in fluid mechanics. The author of this reference book (OOKI) is a physics graduate, so when I was an undergraduate student, I solved partial differential equations as a matter of course. However, since it was more than 20 years ago, that feeling seems to have flown away somewhere. I should learn fluid mechanics from scratch again, but I have been skipping it for a long time. I will learn ocean physics from scratch when I decide to make a chapter of "Ocean Physics Starting from Zero" in this course later on.
Putting myself aside, I urge young people who are the future of oceanography to study ocean physics as well, even if they consider themselves to be biology/chemistry guys.
The following is within the scope of a general textbook on oceanography.
For the vertical structure of seawater, water masses, and ocean currents, see "New Ocean Science, by NOZAWA Genemon, Seizando Shoten" published 30 years ago. I wish it would bear the "new" title forever! I will write a review of the differences between this book and the earlier "Old Marine Science?" The book is carefully explained for beginners. You can get used books online. "Almost new" is at a premium price of 6,000 yen (1,500 yen for "good condition")!
The book I plan to read and learn from now is "Physics of the Ocean, Introduction to Modern Earth Science Series 4, Kyoritsu Shuppan, by HANAWA Kimio". This one has just been published. I am just flipping through it, but the explanations are easy to understand.
If you want to understand qualitatively how ocean currents work, I recommend "Science of Ocean Currents and Waves, by UNOKI Sanaei, Tokai University Press". I am glad that I thought (...) I understood the ocean currents qualitatively with this book. This book also gave me a chance to know ocean physics a little more deeply. However, this book may not be an introduction to ocean physics, since ocean physics is based on constructing mathematical equations and solving them thoroughly. It would be better if a biologist/chemist reads this book, gets interested in ocean physics, and then gets introduced to ocean physics.
(OOKI Atsushi)