Land and water intermingle at Coastlines, where the land meets the sea or ocean. Saltwater and freshwater intermingle in estuaries, where rivers meet the sea, creating a unique ecosystem with a mix of salt and fresh water.
A body of fresh water surrounded by land is a lake or pond.
Fresh water and salt water form layers due to differences in density. Salt water is denser than fresh water, so when they come into contact, the salt water sinks beneath the fresh water, creating distinct layers. This process is known as stratification.
No, rivers typically have fresh water, not salt water. Salt water is found in oceans and seas.
Nova Scotia is the province in Canada that has borders on both fresh water (Atlantic Ocean) and salt water (Bay of Fundy).
Rainforest water is typically fresh water, derived from rainfall, rivers, and streams. Salt water bodies such as oceans and seas are not present within a rainforest ecosystem.
On land fresh, on sailboats salt water.
a gulf!
fresh water, and salt water
No.Antarctica is a continent (there is fresh water ice on land and in the salt water sea around Antarctica).
Salt water. They may have possibly lived in fresh water. However, no fresh water fossils of trilobites have ever been recorded nor found. They were oceanic creatures :)
Fresh and salt water are very different for one key reason, fresh water doesn't contain salt and salt water obviously does. There are different flora and fauna in fresh and salt water for this reason.
Yes, Hermit crabs can survive in salt water but they dont live as long in water as they do on land
on fresh salt water
A lake is generally fresh water, where the ocean is salt water.
Salt water is water that has salt in it and it is found in oceans. Fresh water does not have salt and is found in rivers and lakes.
A salt water has an advantage over other organisms because the earth is made of more salt water then it is fresh water or land. This gives it more space to live and reproduce.
salt water