Freshwater would have minimal amounts of salt (sodium ions and chloride ions) as well as other minerals.
Ocean water and salt basins have become very salty by water washing down rivers and streams with small amounts of salt... and then being concentrated by evaporation.
No, they have freshwater.
Except the Dead sea which is a big salty lake so full of minerals that very few animals can live in it.
Anything that is saline, like the sea of the ocean and some lakes.
no
Fresh water contains no sign of salt, while on the other hand salt water contains salt
The Long Island Sound contains both fresh and salt water because it is an estuary.
Tap water is fresh water. The phrase "fresh water" refers to water with very little or no salt in it (as opposed to salt water, such as is found in oceans). Tap water contains little or no salt, and is therefore fresh water.
The great Mississippi river is made entirely of fresh water.
saltwater has salt in it, freshwater does not.
Fresh water is from rain or snow and is very pure and free of dissolved salts. Salt water is sea water and contains salts (mainly sodium chloride ie common salt)brought in by rivers over millions of years which cannot escape and the sea therefore gets more and more salty every year. Well fresh water evaporates and with the salt water the salt stays in the water that hasn't evaporated yet.
fresh water fish are fish that live in fresh water fresh water is what you would get out of the tap at home as aposed to salt water witch contains salt
The Atlantic Ocean contains salt water. It contains approximately 3% salt.
No. None of the oceans are comprised of fresh water.
Ocean water contains salt. River water is fresh water.
Seawater because it contains salt which makes the water more dense than water which does not contain salt.
"Fresh" water contains all types of salts including sodium chloride, and calcium chloride. Only distilled water contains no salts, it is pure H2O