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No. Seawater is salty, and will freeze at cooler temperatures than freshwater.
No, an iceberg is approximately 10% less dense than seawater. This is why it floats
Seawater does not have a density of 5.
Seawater dissolves more than fresh water because of the salinity in the water.
A turbidity current is a density current that occurs when mud or silt mixes with seawater. This is the result of the increase in the density of the water itself.
It is 787.975 in seawater and freshwater's is 211.
Seawater is more dense than freshwater. Therefore the seawater would sink lower than the freshwater. Ships do indeed stay higher in seawater because of the higher density or specific gravity of seawater over freshwater
the salt makes seawater denser than freshwater. more salt increases the density
seawater is salty and dirty and freshwater is clean and purrified
its a seawater fish
According to the Wikipedia article on "Seawater": "Average density at the surface is 1.025 g/ml...", so that would be about 2.5% more than normal water, which has a density ver close to 1.
Salt
Goldfish are freshwater, not saltwater.
The density of seawater increases if salinity increases.
97% seawater, other 3% is freshwater.
brackish (a combination of seawater and freshwater)
They haven't found a way yet