Surface salinity in polar regions varies seasonally due to the formation and melting of sea ice.
The salinity of water in polar regions varies seasonally because of the melting of sea ice during warmer months.
During warmer months the salinity level goes down because of ice melting. Ice is mostly fresh water.
While all ocean water contains salt, the "salinity" varies in different regions.
salinity
The salinity of the Great Salt Lake varies, but is on average about 12%.
The salinity varies latitudinally. It's somewhere between about 3 and 5%.
The salinity of the Tigris River is between 0.130-0.191. It varies along the river. Salinity rates have been rising which is a cause for concern.
The salinity of the Great Salt Lake in Utah varies between 5 and 27% depending on the level of the water.
30 to 50 flights per week, varies seasonally.
yes..somewhat. It states that the ratio of major salts in samples of seawater from various places is constant. It can give you a rough answer to salinity ,but salinity varies because of elements not included in the major salts of the ocean. If there were no other factors then it would be able to tell you the salinity.
Seawater's density varies by temperature and salinity. I.e., cold water is more dense than warm water, and water with a higher salinity (more dissolved salt) is less dense than water with a lower salinity.
siberian and canadian