no, the salt wont go away it will just be inside the frozen water i don't think salt freezes though.
yes
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Why_sea_water_salt_contain ?
Sea water is salt water.
Sea ice contains frozen minerals, such as salt, that is not frozen into freshwater ice.
the water has no salt and the sea water has salt
To extract salt from sea water on a large scale, banked up areas were flooded with salt water. These shallow lagoons were then closed off and left, until the sun had evaporated the water away, leaving salt crystals behind.
To extract salt from sea water on a large scale, banked up areas were flooded with salt water. These shallow lagoons were then closed off and left, until the sun had evaporated the water away, leaving salt crystals behind.
Fresh water freezes at 32°f (0°c) at sea level. Sea water freezes at 28.4°f (-2°c) at sea level. Salt water depends on the concentration of salt. At maximum saturation salt water (23.3% by weight) freezes at -5.98°f (-21.1°c).
Yes, the sea does contain salt water.
You need a lot of sea water to make salt, However it is a simple matter of letting the sea water evaporate in the sun or boiling the water of until it is dried away, and at that point you will have nothing left but salt and a few other dissolved solids.
The bering sea is salt water.
the sea water is stored in sandboxes and as the water is absorbed the salt stays in the box and we get the salt