Short Answer:
The short short answer is that salt dispersed in the rocks and dirt all over the Earth has been dissolved and washed to the sea. But, the long answer is better.
The question of the salt in the oceans of the Earth can be broken into two parts. First, where has all the salt come from and second, why is there so little salt in the oceans?
Long Answer:
The oceans formed about 4 billions years ago, shortly after the Earth itself formed (4.5 billion years). It is estimated that between 4.4 and 3.8 billion years ago, the earth had cooled enough that water could condense and begin the formation of the oceans. Because the sun was not as bright back then, it is possible that much of the early accumulation of water was in frozen form that melted as the atmosphere changed and the sun warmed the earth again. There are no fixed estimates on how long it took the oceans to form or what the salinity was during the first billion years or so.
The ocean has a lot of salt in it now, 3.5% by weight, but that is not just dissolved sodium chloride (Na+, Cl-).
The ocean contains calcium, magnesium, sodium and potassium with bicarbonate, sulfate, chlorine and bromine. (If you remove the water, then what is left is, by weight, Cl− 55%, Na+ 30.6%, SO42−, 4 7.7%, Mg2+ 3.7%, Ca2+ 1.2%, K+ 1.1%, other 0.7%)
There are some differences in how the different ions of salts get into the ocean, but generally the primary way is through rain falling on the earth and dissolving salts and the rivers carrying the dissolved salts to the ocean. In the early history of the ocean there was surely a significant contribution to salinity from salts being dissolved from the material at the bottom of the ocean. In addition, the Earth gives off various gasses and volcanoes and hydrothermal vents in the ocean have added salts, especially chlorine that enters as hydrochloric acid.
We have, by these mechanisms, a reasonable understanding of how salt has entered the oceans and how it continues to enter the ocean.
The remaining question is why the oceans do not get more salty and have, in fact, remained at a more-or-less stable salinity for billions of years. Water evaporates from the ocean and returns as rain and leaves the salt behind, so if the salinity is constant, salts must be being removed from the oceans. There are different mechanisms that can be operative for different ions of sea salt, but the major removal processes are thought to be salt left after evaporation and salt buried through tectonic processes. The great salt deposits of the world are due to the evaporation of primordial inland seas or ocean deposits where a portion of ocean was isolated and evaporated. The tectonic processes are those where the ions are captured in the sedimentary layers of the ocean bed are buried at the points where tectonic plates move together and subduction carries material from the surface down into the Earth's mantle.
That is the long answer of how salt got into the ocean and how it is now going out at more or less the same rate that it is going in.
The short short answer is that salt dispersed in the rocks and dirt all over the Earth has been dissolved and washed to the sea. But, the long answer is better.
The question of the salt in the oceans of the Earth can be broken into two parts. First, where has all the salt come from and second, why is there so little salt in the oceans?
The oceans formed about 4 billions years ago, shortly after the Earth itself formed (4.5 billion years). It is estimated that between 4.4 and 3.8 billion years ago, the earth had cooled enough that water could condense and begin the formation of the oceans. Because the sun was not as bright back then, it is possible that much of the early accumulation of water was in frozen form that melted as the atmosphere changed and the sun warmed the earth again. There are no fixed estimate on how long it took the oceans to form or what the salinity was during the first billion years or so.
The ocean has a lot of salt in it now, 3.5% by weight, but that is not just dissolved sodium chloride (Na+, Cl-).
The ocean contains calcium, magnesium, sodium and potassium with bicarbonate sulfate, chlorine and bromine. (If you remove the water, then what is left is, by weight, Cl− 55%, Na+ 30.6%, SO2−, 4 7.7%, Mg2+ 3.7%, Ca2+ 1.2%, K+ 1.1%, Other 0.7%)
There are some differences in how the different ions of salt get into the ocean, but generally the primary way is through rain falling on the earth and dissolving salts and the rivers carrying the dissolved salts to the ocean. In the early history of the ocean there was surely a significant contribution to salinity from salts being dissolved from the material at the bottom of the ocean. In addition, the Earth gives off various gasses and volcanoes and hydrothermal vents in the ocean have added salts, especially chlorine that enters as hydrochloric acid.
We have by these mechanisms a reasonable understanding of how salt has entered the oceans and how it continues to enter the ocean.
The remaining question is why the oceans do not get more salty and have, in fact, remained at a more-or-less stable salinity for billions of years. Water evaporates from the ocean and returns as rain and leaves the salt behind, so if the salinity is constant, salts must be being removed from the oceans. There are different mechanisms that can be operative for different ions of sea salt, but the major removal processes are thought to be salt left after evaporation and salt buried through tectonic processes. The great salt deposits of the world are due to the evaporation of primordial inland seas or ocean deposits where a portion of ocean was isolated and evaporated. The tectonic processes are those where the ions are captured in the sedimentary layers of the ocean bead are buried at the points where tectonic plates move together and subduction carries material from the surface down into the Earth's mantle.
That is the long answer of how salt got into the ocean and how it is now going out at more or less the same rate that it is going in.
Salt is not formed in the sea. The salt existed before the water was there. As the oceans have risen and fallen and risen again over millions of years, they dissolved the salts on the ground and in rocks.
There are numerous volcanic outlets in the oceans, and they discharge chemicals into the waters, and many of these are salts.
Also salts are dissolved from the earth and transported by rivers in seas/oceans.
there has been salt on cliffs and when the cliffs get sea water on it the salt on it washes away
Rivers dissolve salts from the rocks on the Earth and this water is transported in seas and oceans.
We taste the sea water like salt is because the rocks from the sea transfer to the sea.
Salt is dissolved from the earth and transported by rivers in seas/oceans.
Salt is in the ocean beacuse of poo
Pacific, Atlantic, Indian, Arctic & Southern
- salt is dissolved from the earth (also as ions Na+ and Cl-) and transported in oceans by rivers - chlorine from volcanic activity in oceans and sodium from the earth form NaCl
The amount of salt in the water. Near the surface of the open oceans salinity is in general between 3.3% and 3.7%
AnswerAll oceans have salt in them. The average salinity of all oceans is 35 parts per thousand. Salinity does vary according to depth and location. Areas of the ocean located near onshore river runoff typically have a lower salinity. Areas near the tropics with high evaporation rates tend to have higher salinity.
comparisons of modern seashells and fossil shells
oceans
oceans have salt water
Oceans have salt water.
Pacific, Atlantic, Indian, Arctic & Southern
All oceans have saltwater.
Salt is dissolved from the Earth and transported by rivers in seas and oceans.
Salt water
salt in water
Salt is dissolved from the earth and transported by rivers in seas and oceans.
oceans have salt water, no fresh water.
Oceans of and by themselves produce neither.
in oceans... and salt lakes