A very large body of salt water partly or entirely surrounded by land is known as a bay.
Tar is less dense than saltwater, so it will float on the surface of saltwater.
Less exposure to the US. Less exposure to the outside world due to it's partially landlocked geography.
Yes. If you wish to get extremely picky they have fundamental differences but basically all fish are more or less the same.
Less than 5 volts
A person can float in saltwater because it is denser than freshwater. The salt in the water increases its density, making it easier for objects like the body to float. This difference in density is why a person can float in saltwater but not in freshwater.
Advantages are: - it uses less energy and is less likely to experience harmful mutation during reproduction - it enables the body to absorb a large amount of the needed substances in food
rivers and runoff dilute the saltwater.
It will melt more quickly with more salt.
No. Saltwater is denser than freshwater, and your body will be more buoyant. You will be higher in the water and, therefore, will have less water resistance. You will swim faster, but will not get as good a workout as in freshwater.
it's due to something called osmosis. If you have salty water on one side of a permeable membrane and less salty water on the other - then nature will try to balance this out by moving water through the barries to dilute the salty water.
Eggs can float in saltwater because the high density of saltwater makes the overall density of the egg lower than that of the water, causing it to float. In freshwater, the egg is denser than the less dense water and therefore sinks.
Galvanized steel. It lasts longer and is less affected by chemicals and saltwater if you choose to go that route. I do suggest saltwater. It needs for less maintance than a pure chlorine pool.