First decant the water - the sand will be left behind. Then evaporate the water and the salt will be left behind.
evaporation technics
Evaporation, boiling or distillation will all result in separating the salt from the water.
Table salt.
Yes, crystallization is a method of separation; a very known application is the separation of salt from sea waters.
Table salt can be collected from the sea water by evaporation phenomenon.
Boil the water so that the salt can recrystallize thus separating the salt from water (evaporation).
You could do a simple evaporation technique. If you actually want to keep the water, you can use distillation. Another technique is reverse osmosis, it's an expensive technique but it works, here the water is forced through a permeable filter, causing the concentration of salt to increase as the water is pushed out.
You can simply separate salt and water by distillation method.
no you can't
by separating rock salt from water .
So the salt dissolves
separating salt from sea water.
Desalination.
evaporation technics
Evaporation, boiling or distillation will all result in separating the salt from the water.
Allow the water to evaporate, leaving behind the salt would be effective for separating salt and water in a mixture.
The scientific name for separating salt from water is "desalination." This process involves removing salt and other impurities from seawater or brackish water to make it suitable for drinking or other uses.