Yes, but we wouldn't be able to drink it.
I would say yes
they do get rated at the same rate
Saltwater intrusion is the movement of ocean water into fresh groundwater that causes contamination of the freshwater by salt. This is a process of nature and usually occurs near the coastlines where the fresh groundwater level approaches the same level as the sea.
Yes just deep the thin slice carrots vegetable in big glass cold water and wait 20 minutes and drink it /same as cucumber the juice extract in the water and get natural benefits .
The plant is most likely to die because the salt water already killed the root cells. It also depends on the concentraition of the plant. some plants are very sensitive when fresh water is placed in ONLY salt water plants
Around the place where river run into the sea. The fresh water from river mix with saline water from sea and the result is water not as salty as sea water and not as fresh as river water. The term come because some organism adapt just to live within between range of river water and sea water. Brackish water area had its' specific ecology.
Salt water is salty because of chemicals that are dissolved in the water. The water is still H2O, the same as fresh water.
Sea water and fresh water does not have the same density because sea water has salt, which makes it more dense than fresh water Sea water and fresh water does not have the same density because sea water has salt, which makes it more dense than fresh water
no it is not the same
same as fresh water......
A Dr Zhivago of vegetables indeed! Tomatoes, fresh from the garden, are acidic with a pH between 4.5 - 5.0. Once ingested and then digested the residual 'ash' it leaves behind to affect the blood and organs with is highly alkaline. Citrus fruits such as oranges and lemons are the same way.
At the same temperature fresh water evaporates faster.
Fresh water (of the same temperature) has the lower density ('lighter').
the pH of distilled water is 7.0 and is the same as pure water The solution is acidic.
Currents and thermal gradients aside, salt water is slightly more dense than fresh water, so (at the same depth, for the same temperature) the pressure in salt water will be creater than for fresh water. The difference in pressure will be (pressure in fresh water) x (density of salt water/density of fresh).
they do get rated at the same rate
Why do humans not live in water? The same concept. We can't breathe in water they can't live in fresh water.
yes