Really hard but can be done at home.
Collecting salt made from the evaporation of sea water
Collecting salt from runoff water
Sugar and salt can dissolve in water, but if you put too much in, the salt or sugar will start collecting at the bottom.
A salt water well can be used for desalination purposes, where the salt is removed from the water to make it suitable for drinking or irrigation. It can also be used for salt production by evaporating the water and collecting the salt deposits. Additionally, salt water wells can be utilized for geothermal energy production by harnessing the heat from the hot brine.
evaporation (heating up water so all the water is separated from the salt) filtration (this is the easiest way of collecting the water, but is the least accurate) dessication (would not be used if trying to obtain water, and would not be used with water and salt) hope it helps :)
Using a Dean stark collection arm with an attached condenser and boiling the water off. You could also use a distillation head with an angled condenser (angled down from the top of the salt water containing flask) and collection flask at the lower end of the condesner.
Sea salt evaporation works by collecting seawater in large shallow ponds exposed to the sun and wind. As the water evaporates, it leaves behind salt crystals which are then harvested. The process is repeated until most of the water is evaporated and only salt remains.
This question is answered already under the heading "Why are large amounts of water collecting in the salt tank of my GE water softener"?
By collecting some sea water, pouring into a wide metal or glass tray and heating it until the water evaporates
The common separation techniques for separating salt water from seawater are distillation, reverse osmosis, and freezing. Distillation involves boiling the water and collecting the steam, leaving the salt behind. Reverse osmosis uses a membrane to filter out the salt ions. Freezing involves freezing the water and then separating the ice crystals from the remaining salt water.
Water is pumped into underground salt beds as a method of storing excess water during periods of high supply or low demand. The salt beds act as natural reservoirs, allowing the water to be stored until needed. Additionally, the salt beds can help prevent water from being lost through evaporation or seepage.
Sea salt is simply salt that comes from the ocean. It is obtained by boiling the water. Once all the water has evaporated, you are left with sea salt. I am sure the process is more complicated than that, but that is where the salt comes from.