Why Ocean Water is Salty?
Why Ocean Water is Salty?
There is no salt in fresh rain-water. River water tastes fresh, sea water salty. Yet the oceans are fed by the rivers that flow into them. Then where does the salt in the sea come from?
When rain falls on the ground it soaks into the earth. In the
earth are all sorts of minerals—salt, lime, magnesia, potash, sulphur,
iron and many others. These are dissolved or melted and carried along by
the water. Of all the minerals in the earth salt is most easily
dissolved by water. So very often, we have salt springs. Rivers are fed
by springs, and all of the minerals are in river water, but not enough
so you can taste them. All the time this salt and other minerals are
poured into the ocean by the rivers. When the sun takes vapor up into
the rain clouds it takes only the water, leaving the minerals behind,
just as lime is left in a teakettle. In this way the minerals in the
sea, salt and everything else, slowly becomes greater in quantity as the
centuries go by. About three and a half per cent of sea water is
minerals, today. That is, if you put one hundred quarts of sea water in a
tank and boil until the water is all boiled away, you will have three
and a half quarts of dry salt, magnesia, lime, potash and other
minerals. The greater part would be salt.
What would you think, then,, of water in which there are from fifteen to
twenty quarts of salt and other minerals in every hundred quarts of
water? The water of our Great Salt Lake and of the Dead Sea is four or
five times as salt as the ocean. Like the ocean, they have no outlets in
rivers. So they keep all the minerals that come into them. After ages
and ages they will lose all their water, dry up and leave great salt
beds behind. Do you think that could ever happen to the big oceans?
Source: http://chestofbooks.com/reference/The-New-Student-s-Reference-Work-Vol5/Why-Is-The-Water-Of-The-Ocean-Salt.html#.ViIKU_krLIU#ixzz3ooTIG3AH
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