Homogeneous, I think...
Brine is a mixture of salt and fresh water, where a river joins the sea.
This is a mixture of water and sea salt to pour over something to rinse it. Depending on what it is used for the temperature of the water can vary.
Evaporation of sea water in salt pans is a typical method. This gives a mixture of salts including sodium chloride.
Sea water takes part in the mixture of salt
Many food products contain sea salt or mixture with rock salt; any difference exist. The chemical is the same - sodium chloride, NaCl.
Because there is more salt in the air from the sea winds; And we know that the mixture of salt and water makes metal rust.
Salt water is a homogeneous mixture called a solution containing salt and water. Salt is the solute and water is the solvent. It is a mixture because the salt and water are not chemically combined and are not present in definite proportions.
Salt and sand is a mixture.
Yes. It's a mixture of water, common salt (sodium chloride) and other salts like magnesium chloride, magnesium bromide, potassium chloride, calcium sulphate and so on
No, a sea does not always have salt water. While most seas, like the Mediterranean Sea, contain salt water, there are also bodies of water referred to as seas that can have fresh water, such as the Caspian Sea, which is technically a lake. Additionally, some coastal areas may have brackish water, a mixture of salt and fresh water.
mixture of rock particle and salt
Its a miture