Yes. Chloride concentration increases with the seas depth. This is because chloride increases the salinity of the water. The more saline the water, the denser it becomes. Dense water, even if it is slightly denser, tends to sink below.
im not sure
No; all seas and oceans contain sodium chloride.
There is no exact depth to the inky deep water. This is because different oceans and seas have different depths.
Seas having not a drain salt accumulates.
Sodium chloride is formeed by the water evaporation from seas.
Sodium chloride is dissolved from the Earth and transported by rivers in the seas and oceans.
The craters are named after seas because scientist believed that there are seas before on the moon base on the craters depth but are now crystallized.
'Pelagic' is certain depth of 'our' seas...
Near seas, oceans, salt lakes the atmosphere contain sodium chloride aerosols.
Near seas, oceans, salt lakes the atmosphere contain sodium chloride aerosols.
In laboratory sodium chloride can be obtained by the reaction: NaOH + HCl = NaCl + H2O In the nature sodium chloride (halite as mineral) was the product of water evaporation from seas.
if the ice seas are liquid, the waters on Uranus could be 2000 times deeper then the deepest sea or ocean on earth.