Ocean Learning Lessons |
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Learning Lesson: A Funny Taste |
OBJECTIVE |
Experience different salinities of various sources of water. |
OVERVIEW |
With up to seven containers of water and table salt, the student a taste of different salinities in various bodies of water around the earth. |
TOTAL TIME |
25 minutes |
SUPPLIES |
7 - 1.5 liter beakers (quart and a half) or larger, 7 sheets of paper, a small drinking cup for each student, 8 liters (2 gallons) of distilled water, one 26-ounce container of salt. |
PRINTED/AV MATERIAL |
Optional: Map/globe to show the locations of the various bodies of water. |
TEACHER PREPARATION |
The water and salt solutions (see procedure below) can be prepared before hand or as a classroom participation. The procedure is designed to produce liter size solutions but salt/water amounts can be halved or quartered should lessor amounts be desired. |
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Background |
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We all know the oceans are salty but so are other sources of water. The oceans have a salinity (salt content) of 35 parts per thousand. The Dead Sea has an average salinity of 290 parts per thousand, almost nine times saltier than the oceans. But what actually does that mean? Just how salty tasting are these various bodies of water?
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Procedure |
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- Write one of the following words on each of the seven sheets of paper: Distilled, Human Tears, The Black Sea, The Oceans, The Red Sea, Great Salt Lake, The Dead Sea.
- Fill each beaker with one liter (one quart) of distilled water and dissolve the following amount of salt in each beaker and place it on the appropriate sheet. (Warming the water in the Great Salt Lake and Dead Sea beakers will help dissolve the salt quicker.)
Salt Content |
Grams (per Liter) |
Ounces (per Quart) |
Distilled |
0 |
0 |
Baltic Sea |
7.1 |
0.2 |
Black Sea |
18.2 |
0.6 |
The Oceans |
35.4 |
1.2 |
Red Sea |
40.5 |
1.4 |
Great Salt Lake |
172 |
5.7 |
The Dead Sea |
293 |
9.8 |
- Beginning with the distilled water, place a teaspoon size (5 ml.) sample, or less, in each student's drinking cup to allow them to taste it. Repeat with each increasingly salty solution.
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Discussion |
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Note: Just the addition of the different amounts of salt alone will be an eye opening event, especially with the very large amount of salt needed to simulate the Dead Sea's salinity.
Distilled water is water that has been boiled (changed to water vapor) and then recondensed (turns back into a liquid). Water is distilled to purify it as the contaminants, like salts, are left behind as the water vapor rises.
This same process talks place in the earth's atmosphere. As the sun heats the oceans, water evaporates leaving the salts and other minerals in the ocean behind. In the atmosphere, the water vapor cools and recondenses into tiny water droplets forming clouds.
Given the right conditions, these droplets collided to form larger and larger drops. Finally, when the rising air can no longer support the weight of the drops, the distilled water returns to the earth as rain eventually flowing back into the sea to begin the process all over again.
Just the addition of the different amounts of salt alone will be an eye opening event, especially with the very large amount of salt needed to simulate the Dead Sea's salinity.
For an extended demonstration, place the beakers in a sunny window sill to allow the water to evaporate. Eventually, all that is left will be the original salt.
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National Weather Service
Southern Region Headquarters
819 Taylor Street
Fort Worth, Texas 76102 |
www.srh.weather.gov
Updated: March 29, 2006 |
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