Salinity is the amount of salt in something. So, "dry land salinity" is the amount of salt in the dry land involved.
Salinity occours pretty much anywhere, in australia, but becasue of the ocean, it generally happens closest to the coast ( up to 300km) or anywhere that has salt lakes or rivers nearby, allowing the salt to eveperate, and then dump on properties, or land nearby.
Yes, salinity is higher in dry, hot areas because the high evaporation rate leaves behind salts dissolved in the water.
Water evaporates much faster in hot, dry climates which cause the ocean or sea in that area to have slightly more salinity
because of evaporation
If this is room 7 blockhouse bay intermediate, 2012. The answer is Dry Land
Salinity is the measure of salt concentration in water
land. Analogies can be antonyms (or opposites) or synonyms (mean the same thing). So the antonym of wet is dry and the antonym of ocean is land. Get it?
runoff from land
If you mean salinity, it is the amount of salt in a liquid.
the saltiness of the sea
Salinity is the amount of salt in water, expressed as parts per 1,000.
dry