as water moves over the ground and rocks, it picks up salt and other substances
I dont know thats why im askin you
To match the average salinity of ocean water, add 35 grams of salt to 1 liter of water.
Precipitation, land water runoff and the melting of icebergs do not add salts to seawater.
The difference between seas and oceans is the size of the area. The ocean is much larger than the sea and a sea is often surrounded on three sides by land.
Depending on how much salt you add to the water and how warm the water is... the salt will disolve
Add salt to water to obtain salt water.
No, unfortunately they can't... Hermit crabs lay their eggs in the ocean, they are born without shells, and eat plankton. If you have a very large aquarium, and can manage to make a mini-saltwater ocean inside as well as dry land, it could be possible... Remember that the ocean must have a proper amount of salt! (table salt is harmful to hermit crabs too...)
Add the salt to the water before you add the potatoes. If you are boiling potatoes with the intention of mashing them, don't add salt at all.
Salt water accounts for 97.5% of all water on Earth. The oceans, seas and bays are salt water and represent 96.5% of all water on Earth. Another 1% exists as saline ground water. See related links.
Salinity is affected by temperature of the water, amount of salt per area, how cool it is, and the amount of water per area. If it's hot, the water will evaporate leaving more salt behind. The more salt you add, of course you will have a higher salinity. If it is cold, ice forms and pushes out the salt into the water below. And if you add more water, there will be more water to hold the salt, thus lowering the salinity.
When it rains, this helps wash minerals into the ocean from the land, which will add more minerals into an area of ocean water. Also, the formation of sea ice can also increase the amount of minerals.
just add salt to it
the salt will disolve