Dear A Moment of Science,
I know why the ocean is still salty: evaporated water leaves the salt behind. But how did it get salty in the first place?”—Salty Dog
According to one hypothesis, oceans formed at least 500 million years ago when water vapor and other gasses escaping from the Earth’s interior gradually formed the atmosphere and clouds surrounding the planet. As the earth cooled below the boiling point of water, rain began to fall, and kept falling for centuries. Eventually the rainfall filled the Earth’s hollows and formed oceans.
Salt of the Earth
In their infant state these oceans were not nearly as salty as they are today. As the initial rains swept over the planet’s surface and filtered down to the hollows, the rushing waters picked up chemicals from erosion of the Earth’s crust. These chemicals included sodium, which is one of the main ingredients of salt. The other main ingredient, chlorine, came from the solid and gaseous fallout of land and ocean floor volcanoes. Over hundreds of millions of years the steady flow of chemical-rich rivers and streams and the eruption of volcanoes and undersea vents combined to increase the oceans’ salt content.
This does not mean, however, that the oceans’ saltiness is constantly increasing. Scientists believe that ocean salinity reached a plateau hundreds of millions of years ago, when roughly the same amount of salt fed into the oceans was deposited as sediment on the ocean floor.
【英语听力文摘:海盐的形成】相关文章:
简单少儿英语故事:四只老鼠02-08
no one与nobody的用法是什么 相关句子整理02-08
儿童英语歌曲:The Wheels on the Bus02-08
万圣节英语作文范文:Jack light02-08
重庆市教育委员会中学招生办公室:2024重庆万盛中考成绩查询入口、查分网站02-08
英语基础口语对话:玛丽的媒体选择02-08
2013情人节英文祝福短信大全02-08
四年级作文一件后悔的事【五篇】02-08
