Wood and expanded polystyrene.
The Earth is made up on mostly bodies of water and of those bodies of water, many of them are salt water. The Pacific and Atlantic oceans are two bodies of salt water.
Examples:Dead Sea, Great Salt Lake.
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Yes, ice will float in water because ice is less dense than water, you can think about how an iceberg floats in the ocean too.
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No, but different salinity levels can float over each other. Basic properties of diffusion rule out the very concept of the two able to float over the other but if two different concentrations of water come in contact they will mix and eventually form one homogeneous solution. However if a large body of water has salt, such as an ocean, the general rule is "The deeper you go the saltier it gets" Hope I answered your question!
The separate layers formed because salt water is denser than pure water. Fresh water has a density of about 1.0 gram per ml of volume. Matter with higher density will sink in water; matter with lower density will float on top.The density of an egg is between that of water and salt water, so in your beaker, the egg balanced between the two layers.
In a mixture of oil and water, the two will separate with the oil on top. If the water has enough solute in it (salt, sugar), the egg will float in the water, but not above the oil. An egg is denser than fresh water, but less dense than salt water. It is denser than most oils.
two cups
the mid westAlso, the Spanish Territory.
It is just when the river eventually flows into the two bodies of water and combines into one. Like a water fall.
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