Well, many people might associate this to the increase in the movement of particles that occurs along with the increase in temperature, but that might not be enought to move ocean water to different places.
I'd relate it to density. Because, the higher the movement of particles, the lover the density. Which means that if we start cooling and sinking bringing new water to the surface, and if that becomes a cycle, along with water currents, we can create a movement.
↑ In my opinion, that is a really good point, so you should elaborate more on how the water currents will affect the process, and that should be it.
Hope it helped,
BioTeacher101
<span>Sweating makes the body cool after wetness goes away. This includes the factors in cooling your body by sweating are molecules colliding with multiple angles and speeds, hydrogen bonds are relatively weak and water has more energy at the body surface. So by all these reasons cooling makes the body cool through sweating.</span>
Aquatic life transitioned to terrestrial life when anatomy structures began to change in ways such as fins slowly evolved into legs, gills into lungs, and instead of suction feeding they started to bite instead.