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Why Is the Ocean Salty?

Salt journeys around the planet, leaving its mark at every step — before it's ultimately deposited into the ocean. Here's how the process works, and why the ocean's salt content may be more important than you think.

By Cody Cottier
May 9, 2024 3:00 PM
In the Plemmirio natural reserve in Sicily, Italy, I found some salt on the rocks left by the sea water after the tide. The arid landscape and the power of nature in this place are impressive.
(Credit: Eug Png/Shutterstock)

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If you’ve ever had the misfortune to swallow a mouthful of seawater, you have some idea of its intense salinity. One small gulp is bad enough, but the total salt content of Earth’s oceans is truly staggering: Based on an average of 7 tablespoons per liter, scientists have calculated that they hold about 50 quadrillion tons (that’s 15 zeros) of dissolved salt.

More incredible still, it wasn’t always there. It trickled slowly into the ocean — grain by grain, year by year — from the mountains, hills and plains of the terrestrial landscape. To see why, we first need to understand a few things about salt.

Where Salt in the Ocean Comes From

Salt is much more than a dinner-table seasoning. In chemistry, the term refers to any compound with positively and negatively charged ions — not just the sodium chloride we use to enhance our cooking, but also magnesium, sulfate, potassium and many others.

These diverse salts are present in rocks all over the world. And as natural forces like freezing and thawing break rocks down into smaller and smaller chunks, their minerals (salt included) are flushed toward the sea by erosion.

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