Seawater is water from a sea or ocean On average, seawater in the world's oceans has a salinity of about 3.5% (35 g/L, or 599 mM). This means that every kilogram (roughly one liter by volume) of seawater has approximately 35 grams (1.2 oz) of dissolved salt (predominantly sodium chloride iron: Na+, Cl−). The average density of seawater at the ocean surface is 1.025 g/gm Seawater is denser than both fresh water and pure water (density 1.0 g/ml @ 4 °C (39 °F)) because the dissolved salts add mass without contributing significantly to the volume. The freezing point of sea water decreases as salt concentration increases. At a typical salinity it freezes at about −2 °C (28.4 °F). The coldest sea water ever recorded (in a liquid state) was in 2010, in a stream under an Antarctic glacier, and measured −2.6 °C (27 °F
The only real difference is that salt water has salt. The implications of this are that salt water has a lower freezing point than normal water, and that drinking it in significant amounts is fatal.
Fresh water is not salty. Salt water is salty.
Answer Lakes are usually inland and fresh water. Oceans aren't in land, and therefore salt water.
They are both liquid and they both have the same chemical structure (hydrogen atoms and oxygen atoms chemically bonding to make h20).
They are both water and having a chemical formular H2O.
Salt water is for cooking while sea water is naturally salty
Salt.
A bay is a body of water bordered on 3 sides by land, and by definition the "4th side" is the ocean. Whether it is saltwater or freshwater will depend on where the water is from. If the bay is of an ocean, it will be of saltwater. If it is of a freshwater lake or river, it will be of freshwater.
Both have water, living organisms and are connected. :)
The only similarities are that these deal with solutions. If the cell is placed into a hypotonic solution, the amount of salt (or sugar) will be lower, and water will move into the cell, and it will swell. Water will move from a lower concentration of water to a higher to reach a balance. The opposite will be true for hypertonic solutions, the cell will lose water. They appear crenate or serrated.
The natural habitat of the Anaconda is freshwater rivers and swamps in South America. Even sea-snakes indigenous to the ocean require fresh water to drink or they become dehydrated and die.It is highly unlikely that an Anaconda could survive in salt water for any significant length of time.
Irrigation of the Great Lakes could result in Salinization. It would be turned from freshwater to salt water. All of the salt would stay while the water would be drawn out leaving mostly all salt found behind. It could end up in the lakes shrinking.
Salt in the water. Salt water.
Salt in the water. Salt water.
saltwater has salt in it, freshwater does not.
freshwater lake has no salt and saltwater has many salt particles
umm the salt water is used to ahving salt in its natural habitat and the fresh water is not
a salt water lake has a freshwater inlet but and inland sea has no inlet.
Where a freshwater river drains into an ocean, the fresh water may mix with the salt water ... this is called brackish water.
No Oceans are not Freshwater, they are salt water
Ocean water has salt in it, Freshwater does not.
Lakes will usually have freshwater.
Freshwater is water that contains no salt or sodium.
I have freshwater fish and i use aquarium salt. I put more in every time i do a water change