Utah. It has the Great Salt Lake, a remnant of Lake Bonneville. It has no out-put to the ocean, and so is very salty, so salty, in fact, that only brine shrimp can live in it.
It is the definition of fresh water. Fresh water comes from rain and is pure water, until it reaches the sea which is full of salt.
When it is full Very salty water. When it is empty dry salt bed.
Salt water is NOT invented, it has been there for ages and everywhere: two-third of the world's surface is covered by oceans full of salty water.
Typically, one teaspoon of salt is enough to dissolve in a full glass of water without oversaturating it. Adding too much salt can cause the water to become too salty to drink.
because ocean water is not a fresh water. it contains a lot of chemicals including salt which makes it salty.
Yes, it is. And it is not the only landlocked body of salt water in the world. The Dead Sea and the Caspian Sea are two others Lake eyer is another in Australia, when it is full it has a very high concentration of salt.
Both "full of" and "filled with" are correct, but they are used in slightly different contexts. "Full of" is typically used to describe a state of being, while "filled with" is used to indicate the action of pouring something into a space. For example, "The cup is full of water" versus "The cup is filled with water."
Freshwater would have minimal amounts of salt (sodium ions and chloride ions) as well as other minerals. Ocean water and salt basins have become very salty by water washing down rivers and streams with small amounts of salt... and then being concentrated by evaporation.
I suppose fast food is more salty and full of fat.
They are always full of water!!
Sea water can be used to obtain salt because water is a solvent, and sea water is generally near saturation. Because the water is full of salt, which does not evaporate, when the water evaporates, salt crystals are left behind. Essentially, you are not obtaining salt from the sea water, but removing the water from the sea salt.