Practically any difference.
Practically any difference.
salt in the sea water dissolves some selections of the sea cliff
Something unusual about swimming in the dead sea is that the salt saturation is so high, that the salt can support your body weight, so that you almost always float.
saltwater has salt in it, freshwater does not.
this is because the sea is full of salt (as most people figure out after swallowing most of it) which acts as a buoyant that's why in the dead sea you float a lot easier as it is full of salt. in the swimming pool it doesn't contain as much salt. hope this helps :)
Sea water is a heterogeneous mixture. Although it does contain fully dissolves solutes it also contains suspended particles and countless living organisms.
At the same depth the pressure is greater at sea because salt water is denser than fresh water.
Salt layers form at the bottom of the sea because as seawater evaporates, the salt content becomes more concentrated. Eventually, the concentration reaches a point where the salt precipitates out and settles on the seabed, forming solid salt layers over time.
Sodium Chloride would be one possible answer since there is an almost endless supply of salt you can get from the sea.
It is easier to float because the sea water is denser than water found in a swimming pool. This is caused by the salt in the oceans.
Yes, water is a solvent for salt. When salt is added to water, it dissolves due to the polarity of water molecules, which allows them to surround and break apart the ionic bonds of the salt crystals, resulting in a solution of saltwater.