Mexico has 9,330 kilometers (5,780 miles) of coastline, running through the Gulf of Mexico, Caribbean Sea, Gulf of California and Pacific Ocean. All of them have salt water.
The only "beaches" without salt water are those found on inland lakes, such as the Patzcuaro and Chapala lakes.
It is a rare occurrence but yes alligators have been spotted at beaches.
No. They are in fresh water, not salt.
Generally, beaches found on oceans and their estuaries will be salt water, and the remainder of the beaches found upstream will be fresh.
Salt water. The Gulf of Mexico is salt water because it connects to Atlantic Ocean.
Salt water. The Persian gulf is one of the saltiest bodies of water on earth.
10%
10%
The gulf of Mexico.
Along shorelines and near beaches
The Miss. River is fresh water, and when it collides with the Gulf Of Mexico, it mixes with the salt ocean water, thus becoming salt water!!
The Gulf of Mexico is an oceanic basin, and by definition, must contain salt water. Something like that thought the Gulf of mexico is basically a reef or in other words a really big lake that covers 4 percent of the world which is 2 aquers
I've lived in southern AZ for 15 years. Trust me, no coastline in this state! However, salt water beaches in Rocky Point,(Puerto Penasco) Mexico are closer to PHX and Tucson than the Pacific in San Diego.