yes actually it does. but there is a certain process that they go through and if u would please tell me what it is look me up on facebook its Nicole Gilmore rox :)
leh rocks :D The sea erodes the rocks in the ocean and over time, the rocks become salt
Sea salt is extracted from sea/ocean waters.
The sea.
Most of the salt in the ocean comes from under sea vents but some does come from rocks being eroded Sodium Chloride has a very high residency time as well because it does not evaporate
Salt and other minerals come into the sea from rivers. Some of the water evaporates from the ocean (leaving the salt) and more flows in. So the sea gets saltier over time.
Large bodies of salt water are called seas or oceans.
In many cases, the two words "sea" and "ocean" are used to mean the same thing. Just as a "sea captain" actually sails on the ocean, "sea salt" really means salt coming from the ocean. There are technical differences between a "sea" and and "ocean" but these are not adhered to in nontechnical, normal daily language. When it comes to salt, the stuff one buys in the store as "sea salt" is likely to be from a sea and not an ocean. The salt gotten by evaporation from inland seas is often closer to pure sodium chloride than salt gotten directly from the ocean which is 78% sodium chloride.
In brief, sodium chloride (salt) is a natural component of the rocks, and as erosion and solution take their course, the salt is dissolved and flows to the sea. The sea can absorb a large quantity of salt.
salt is formed in the sea by water from rivers and streams washing salt from the ground into the ocean.
No. Salt is a relatively common mineral worldwide. While there is such thing as a salt mine, anywhere with access to an ocean or saltwater lake/sea has access to salt.
Salt is extracted from salt mines or sea/ocean waters.
it is grown in the ocean becuase it is called sea salt and it is is grown in grown in the sea