Film, Media & TV0 min ago
Why are the oceans salt water?
Obviously something to do with the early formation of the planet but why so much salt?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The ocean is salty because the salt manufacturers around the world pour most of their assets into the ocean and seas of the world in order to make salt more rare, and thus more valuable.
The Dead Sea and Salt Lake City are actually sites where massive Exxon-Valdez-type salt spills have occurred. Instead of cleaning up their mess, the manufacturers built a city upon one location and planted some very old biblical scrolls upon the other as a diversion.
The upside of this scandal is that salt makes water more buoyant so swimmers are now able to float longer in the ocean than they used to and fewer are drowning because of this.
The Dead Sea and Salt Lake City are actually sites where massive Exxon-Valdez-type salt spills have occurred. Instead of cleaning up their mess, the manufacturers built a city upon one location and planted some very old biblical scrolls upon the other as a diversion.
The upside of this scandal is that salt makes water more buoyant so swimmers are now able to float longer in the ocean than they used to and fewer are drowning because of this.
The rivers constantly disolve various salts (not just Sodium Chloride) into the sea.
A classic statistic is that a cubic mile of sea water contains a tonne of gold.
So over time the Oceans become more salty. In fact the salt concentration of the oceans was one of the earliest attempts to calculate the age of the Earth. Unsurprising it was way out but it came up with many millions of years rather than 6,000
A classic statistic is that a cubic mile of sea water contains a tonne of gold.
So over time the Oceans become more salty. In fact the salt concentration of the oceans was one of the earliest attempts to calculate the age of the Earth. Unsurprising it was way out but it came up with many millions of years rather than 6,000
That's the catch in the statistic
It gets people all excited but a tonne of gold is only about 50 litres, a cublic mile is 4,000 billion litres you get £20 miilion from your tonne of gold that means that breaking even you cave to run up a cost of less than a thousandth of a penny a litre to process
Processing a cubic mile of seawater for that sort of money is completely impractical
But like many things you have to look at the numbers
It gets people all excited but a tonne of gold is only about 50 litres, a cublic mile is 4,000 billion litres you get £20 miilion from your tonne of gold that means that breaking even you cave to run up a cost of less than a thousandth of a penny a litre to process
Processing a cubic mile of seawater for that sort of money is completely impractical
But like many things you have to look at the numbers
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