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2007-03-03 14:59:02 · 4 answers · asked by chrystal_sanderson 1 in Environment

4 answers

As rainwater passes through soil and through rocks, it dissolves some of the minerals, a process called weathering. This is the water we drink, and of course, we cannot taste the salt because its concentration is too low. Eventually, this water with its small load of dissolved minerals or salts reaches a stream and flows into lakes and the ocean. The annual addition of dissolved salts by rivers is only a tiny fraction of the total salt in the ocean. The dissolved salts carried by all the world’s rivers would equal the salt in the ocean in about 200 to 300 million years.
hope this helps!!!

2007-03-03 15:05:00 · answer #1 · answered by PANDA 3 · 0 0

Most of the ocean's salts were derived from gradual processes such the breaking up of the cooled igneous rocks of the Earth's crust by weathering and erosion, the wearing down of mountains, and the dissolving action of rains and streams which transported their mineral washings to the sea. Some of the ocean's salts have been dissolved from rocks and sediments below its floor.

2007-03-03 23:08:55 · answer #2 · answered by yehaa yahoo 2 · 0 0

http://www.utdallas.edu/~pujana/oceans/why.html

2007-03-03 23:05:29 · answer #3 · answered by johnsredgloves 5 · 0 0

The semen of the whales

2007-03-03 23:06:29 · answer #4 · answered by thewanderer862003 1 · 0 4

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