History, asked by fruity3298, 1 year ago

Why are there differences in the salinity of oceans

Answers

Answered by ak4731
0

Answer:

SEA WATER IS A FORM OF SEA AND OCEANON AVERAGE SEA WATSR IN THE WORLD'S OCEAN HAS SALINITY OF APPRXIMATELY 3.5% OR 35 PARTS PER THOUSAND THIS MEANS THAT FOR EVERY 1L ( 1000ML ) OF SEA WATER THERE ARE 35gm OF SALT ( MOSTLY BUT NOT ENTIRELY SODIUM CHLORIDE ) IS DISSOLVED IN IT.

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Answered by BrainlyShanu
3

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  • Salinity is defined as total amount of dissolved salts in sea water.

  • It is calculated as amount of salt (in grams) dissolved in 1000 gms of sea water and usually expressed in "ppt" (parts per thousand).

  • Salinity differs from one water source to other.

  • For example:-salinity of fresh water(ponds,rivers etc..) is 0-5 ppt, brakish water (estuaries, Swamps etc..)

  • The main reason for these differences can attributed to :-

  1. Rate of chemical erosion of bed rock.
  2. Rate of evaporation.
  3. Presence of biological elements (plants and animals).

  • For example, if rate of evaporation is high, the amount of salt gets accumulated is high leading to high salinity.

  • Example:- dead sea has salinity of 238%.

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