Yes, it is true.
table salt Any difference; table salt, rock salt, sea salt are the same chemical compound - sodium chloride, NaCl.
Table salt and sea salt are identical: sodium chloride, NaCl.
It can be NOTE salt comes from the ground or sea.
Sea salt is salt that is derived from dehydrated sea water. Table salt is mainly mined from huge underground salt mines, refined, and then treated with iodine.
sea salt or salt mines
Sea salt is refined to obtain common, edible salt.
I've been looking for this answer for myself, and found the following elsewhere on the web. I haven't tested it out though, so cannot speak to its accuracy: "As a general rule: one teaspoon of regular table salt equals two teaspoons of Diamond Crystal brand kosher salt or 1-1/2 teaspoons of Morton brand kosher salt. Sea salts can generally be used interchangeably with table salt, unless they're large flakes. In that case, "Salt to taste" is the best guide."
2 tsp of table salt. The only difference between the two is the size of the granules.
Table salt can be collected from the sea water by evaporation phenomenon.
Yes. Sea salt, table salt, edible salt...all are sodium chloride - NaCl.
Uniodized salt is a table salt which has no added Iodine.
No there are not the same. Sea salt has no non-climping agents in it but table salt does. Some time ago they a certain salt company won the contract to supply salt licks for animals. The people that changed to that salt lick had multiple problems which included still births, birth defects and many other problems. Since salt was the only thing that they had changed in their animals diets they discontinued the salt that contained agents that kept it from clumping. In doing so their animals eventualy went back to having healthy deliveries, etc. Somtimes when you change things that are working it ends up rainging when it is pouring.