Ice does not contain salt, even when it forms in the sea.
magic
The ice in ice caps is all water. Add that to sea water and the sea will be come more dilute. If you add ice cubes to your Pepsi, it too will be come dilute.
Sea Salt melts ICE
Yes, the sea does contain salt water.
No. Most of their salt is from mines, but they may have a sea salt out as well.
Icebergs that break off into the ocean from glaciers do not contain salt, as they are formed by freshwater on land (snow, ice). Icebergs that form in the ocean mostly do not contain salt either. This is because as the seawater freezes, it forms a crystal structure (ice) that prevents salt ions from being included.
sea salt but a little difference
The world's oceans collectively contain about 45 500 000 000 000 000 tonnes of salt. Even more salt exists in salt lakes, in mineralized sea salt deposits, in porous rocks, and in frozen sea ice.
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Why_sea_water_salt_contain ?
Sea ice contains frozen minerals, such as salt, that is not frozen into freshwater ice.
The sea.
yes it does
When sea salt is added to ice, it lowers the freezing point of the ice. This helps to melt the ice, because in order for it to stay frozen the temperature would have to drop further.