Yes, though the brine drains out over time.
believe it or not, sea salt is more water soluble.
sea water is made of water and salt of course
Salt is expelled as the ocean water freezes to form sea ice
sea salt
Water &&+ Salt?.
No.Antarctica is a continent (there is fresh water ice on land and in the salt water sea around Antarctica).
The ice on Antarctica fell as snow and is therefore not salty. The sea ice forming around Antarctica releases the salt as the sea water freezes.
Salt candissolve ice, so the salt in sea water act like a antifreeze. Sea Water would probably start freezing at - 15C
Salt and Water. Molecules, too.
Ice does not contain salt, even when it forms in the sea.
Sea Salt melts ICE
A sea water ice cube would melt faster than a normal ice cube because sea water has a lower freezing point due to the presence of salt. This means that it would require less heat energy to melt the sea water ice cube compared to a normal ice cube.