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Sea water is allowed to flood special shallow ponds. The water will evaporate, leaving salt crystals behind.
In some countries it is mined. In many countries it is taken from the sea in evaporation ponds.
Quest - 2007 Salt Ponds to Wetlands Brain at Work Sea 3-D 1-19 was released on: USA: 17 September 2007
Sodium
The salt doesn't evaporate, just the water. The salt stays there. That's how we get sea salt.
Yes, the salt is left behind when the water has been evaporated because the salt has been dissolved in the water then the bits of salt is left over.
Sea salt is simply salt that comes from the ocean. It is obtained by boiling the water. Once all the water has evaporated, you are left with sea salt. I am sure the process is more complicated than that, but that is where the salt comes from.
by the process of evaporation. when sea water evaporates salt is left behind. same process is done at the shore of sea...
Sea salt
yes. The water is evaprated then you are left with the salt
The greatest percentage of salt is extracted from mines. You get sea water and put it in a evaporating dish. Then evaporate the water and then there is salt left.
Fresh water occurs in rivers, lakes, and ponds, and falls as rain. It is fresh in the sense that it is not salt water (sea water).