The Earth | How Salty Is Seawater?

How salty is seawater?

Seawater is, on average, 3.3 to 3.7 percent salt. The amount of salt in seawater varies from place to place. In areas where large quantities of fresh water are supplied by melting ice, rivers, or rainfall, such as the Arctic and Antarctic, the level of salinity (saltiness) is lower. In other areas, such as the Persian Gulf and the Red Sea, salt concentrations exceed 4.2 percent.

If all the salt in the seas could be extracted and dried, it would form a mass of solid salt the size of Africa. Most of salt in the seas has been dissolved from the solid Earth—a process occurring over hundreds of millions of years. Sea salt also comes from salty volcanic rock. This rock flows up from a giant rift which runs through every ocean basin.

Sources: Considine, Glenn D. Van Nostrand's Scientific Encyclopedia, 8th ed., vol. 2, p. 2047; Feldman, David. Do Penguins Have Knees? p. 149; Groves, Don....

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