Contributor: Meghan Vestal. Lesson ID: 11528
Have you gargled with salt water to soothe a sore throat? Did you swallow? Bleh! There are bodies of salt water all over. What lives there and how does salt get there? Try a salty hands-on experiment!
Watch this quick video.
If you have ever been to the beach, you probably got water from the ocean in your mouth and eyes just like the kids in the video above!
You probably noticed seawater does not taste like a normal glass of water, and your eyes probably burned when you got the ocean water in them. You may have also noticed that your skin feels sticky after you get out of the ocean.
The ocean is full of salt. Salt gives the water a funny taste, burns your eyes, and leaves your skin sticky.
The ocean has significantly more salt than you pour on your vegetables at dinner.
Scientists estimate that there are about seven teaspoons of salt for every liter of water in the ocean.
To paint a better picture, it would take three large shipping containers full of salt to make an Olympic-sized swimming pool as salty as the ocean.
The amount of salt in the ocean can vary by location. To find out why salinity, or the amount of salt in water, varies by location, read about Ocean salinity.
The ocean's saltiness is caused when minerals are eroded. These minerals are deposited into the ocean through weathering.
To learn more about this process, read Why is the ocean salty?.
Finally, explore NASA's Salinity site and find the answers to the following questions.
Then, move to the Got It? section to experiment with salinity.