It is the other way around. The polar seas are the least saline of the worlds oceans, due to low evaporation and heavy freshwater inflow from rivers and streams.
If water is evaporated salt remain in the ocean.
the ocean becomes saltier (evaporation) or less salty (precipitation/runoff)
the water becomes saltier and denser and its common near the shore.
No. Water is polar, and only dissolves other polar things.
Because the salt doesn't freeze out with the ice. This leaves the sea water saltier, hence more dense.
ocean water, because it is saltier.
If water is evaporated salt remain in the ocean.
makes the ocean water saltier
Before and after I am done urinating in Mediterranean beaches, the water is much saltier than the Atlantic due to the fact that the Mediterranean loses more water to evaporation than it receives from rivers.
The cooler saltier water sinks toward the ocean floor.
That would be the Dead Sea. It's approximately 9 times saltier than the ocean's waters.
saltier
The water that doesn't evaporate into vapor stays in the ocean as liquid water. The oceans have a lot of liquid water. Over time, ocean water is always evaporating and turning into rain and comes back to the ocean; but the salts and minerals carried into the sea from rivers never evaporate. They stay dissolved in the ocean waters and make it saltier and saltier.
the ocean becomes saltier (evaporation) or less salty (precipitation/runoff)
Please help
Ocean water has salt in it, Freshwater does not.
The salt marsh can leak into the ocean, causing the ocean to be saltier. OR The marshes are no where near the ocean, so they can't affect it at all.