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8: The Water Cycle and Ocean Salinity

  • Page ID
    31574
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    There’s a fairy tale told to Norwegian school children about how the sea came to be salty. In this tale, a greedy man steals a magic (and lucrative) salt grinder from his poor brother and escapes in a ship with the salt grinder on board. The magic salt grinder requires a secret spell to stop it, but the greedy brother ran off too quickly to learn the spell. Soon the ever-churning salt grinder fills the ship with salt and the ship sinks. All hands are lost, including the greedy brother. But the salt grinder—still waiting for the secret code—carries on at the bottom of the ocean. Over the centuries, the grinder churned and churned and churned, spilling salt into the deep, dark ocean. It still churns to this day. And that’s how the ocean became salty.

    People have long been curious about salt and the salty nature of seawater. In fact, salts—at least the dried kind found on land—have occupied the attention of humans for millennia. According to Mark Kurlansky, author of Salt: A World History (2004), human use of salt began in an arid region of China around 6000 BCE. People gathered salt from a seasonally dry lake bed and stored it in pots with fish and soybeans, producing what came to be known in modern times as soy sauce. Next time you sit down to a meal with soy sauce, consider that you are partaking in a tradition more than 8,000 years old.

    Native Americans apparently used salt for various purposes, too. A historical marker in Redondo Beach, California, commemorates the location where native people gathered to collect salts for cooking, food preservation, trading, and other uses. In fact, as the sign points out, there are times in human history when salt was more valuable than gold. (I have trouble imagining pirates demanding the location of a treasure chest of salt, but that’s another story.)

    Salt remains an integral part of modern human cuisine. On your next grocery store visit, stop by the spice aisle and check out the different varieties of sea salts. My favorite is Himalayan sea salt. When I eat it, I feel like I am on top of the world. (You know, Himalayas . . . Mount Everest . . . highest mountain in the world? Oh, never mind.)

    But where do those salts come from? And how does their concentration change from place to place and time to time in the world ocean? The answers lie ahead.


    This page titled 8: The Water Cycle and Ocean Salinity is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by W. Sean Chamberlin, Nicki Shaw, and Martha Rich (Blue Planet Publishing) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.