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Why is the Ocean Water Salty ?

11:311,743 words · ~9 min readEnglishTranscribed Apr 20, 2026
AI Summary

Ocean salinity is the result of a multi-billion-year accumulation of minerals dissolved from land by acidic rain, supplemented by hydrothermal vents and underwater volcanoes. While evaporation removes water, the salts remain trapped, creating a balanced chemical system that regulates global climate and ocean currents.

Understanding ocean salinity is critical for comprehending the 'thermohaline circulation' that distributes heat across the planet and for identifying potentially habitable environments in our solar system.

Section summaries

0:00-1:00

Introduction and Hook

optional

Sets up the basic question of why fresh rivers lead to salty oceans.

1:00-2:00

Scale of Salinity

watch

Provides essential statistics and visual metaphors for the amount of salt on Earth.

2:00-5:00

Land-Based Sources and Residence Time

watch

Explains the role of acidic rain and why the ocean's salinity remains stable over time.

5:00-7:00

Hydrothermal Vents (1977 Discovery)

watch

Crucial engineering/geology context regarding the ocean floor's role in mineral cycling.

7:00-9:00

Volcanoes and Closed Systems

optional

Discusses underwater volcanoes and high-salinity lakes like the Dead Sea.

9:00-11:00

Climate Impact and Europa

watch

Connects salinity to global heat distribution and the search for extraterrestrial life.

Key points

  • The One-Way Accumulation Trap — Rainwater is naturally acidic due to absorbed CO2; it dissolves minerals (sodium, calcium) from rocks and carries them via rivers to the sea. Because evaporation is a 'purification process,' only water molecules escape back into the atmosphere, leaving minerals behind to accumulate over billions of years.
  • Hydrothermal Vents as Chemical Regulators — Discovered in 1977, hydrothermal vents cycle the entire volume of the ocean every 10 million years. Seawater seeps into the crust, is heated to 400°C by magma, and re-emerges as 'black smokers' enriched with metals and minerals pulled from the deep rock.
  • Residence Time and Chemical Balance — Ocean salinity is stable because elements have 'residence times'—the duration they stay in the water before being removed by sediment, sea spray, or crystallization. Sodium stays for 260 million years, while iron is removed in just 200 years.
If every grain of salt were pulled out of the ocean... it would form a solid layer 166 m thick. That is roughly the height of a 40-story building. Covering everything. Narrator
Evaporation is a purification process. Only the water molecules leave. Everything dissolved in the water... stays behind. Narrator

AI-generated from the transcript. May contain errors.

0:00

Rain falls from the sky.

0:01

It lands on mountains, fills rivers, and

0:05

eventually flows into the ocean.

0:07

That same water, the exact same water,

0:10

then evaporates back into the sky and

0:12

falls as rain again.

0:14

The water goes around and around in a

0:16

continuous loop.

0:18

But here is the problem with that.

0:21

If rain is fresh

0:23

and rivers are fresh

0:25

and the water feeding the ocean has

0:26

always been fresh

0:29

why is the ocean salty?

0:32

Where did the salt even come from in the

0:34

first place?

0:36

And if water keeps cycling in and out of

0:38

the ocean, why doesn't that cycle wash

0:40

the salt away over time?

0:42

There is something happening here that

0:43

most people have never stopped to think

0:45

about. And when the full answer comes

0:47

together, it points to processes

0:49

happening miles beneath the ocean floor.

0:51

Processes that were completely unknown

0:53

to science until 1977.

0:56

If this is the kind of thing that keeps

0:57

your brain busy, subscribe so you never

0:59

miss a video like this. And drop a

1:02

comment below if there's anything about

1:04

this topic you don't fully understand

1:06

yet. I read every comment and reply

1:09

personally. Start with the numbers

1:11

because they put everything into

1:13

perspective. The ocean holds about 97%

1:16

of all the water on Earth. Its average

1:18

salinity is 3.5% by weight.

1:21

That means every single liter of

1:23

seawater carries about 35 g of dissolved

1:26

salts inside it.

1:27

That does not sound like much until you

1:29

scale it up.

1:30

If every grain of salt were pulled out

1:32

of the ocean and spread evenly across

1:34

all the land on Earth, every continent,

1:37

every mountain range, every desert, it

1:39

would form a solid layer 166 m thick.

1:43

That is roughly the height of a 40-story

1:45

building.

1:46

Covering everything. And the most

1:48

dominant substance in that layer would

1:50

be sodium chloride, the same thing

1:52

sitting in a shaker on a kitchen table.

1:55

Sodium and chloride alone make up about

1:57

85% of everything dissolved in the

2:00

ocean.

2:01

So, how did it all get there? The first

2:03

part of the answer starts on land

2:06

with rain. Rainwater is slightly acidic.

2:09

Not because of pollution. This is

2:11

completely natural.

2:13

As water vapor condenses in the

2:14

atmosphere, it absorbs carbon dioxide

2:18

and forms a weak solution of carbonic

2:20

acid.

2:21

When that acidic rain hits rocks and

2:23

soil, it slowly dissolves minerals out

2:26

of them. Sodium, calcium,

2:29

magnesium, potassium,

2:31

all pulled out of the rock and carried

2:33

away.

2:34

Those dissolved minerals flow into

2:36

streams. Streams feed rivers.

2:39

Rivers flow toward the ocean.

2:41

And they have been doing this without

2:43

stopping for billions of years. Here is

2:46

the critical detail.

2:48

Rivers do carry dissolved salts, but the

2:50

concentration is so low, around 0.01%,

2:54

that river water tastes completely

2:56

fresh. The salt is there.

2:58

It is just invisible at that scale.

3:01

But this is where the ocean behaves

3:02

differently from everything else.

3:04

When water enters the ocean, it

3:06

eventually evaporates back into the

3:08

atmosphere. But evaporation is a

3:10

purification process. Only the water

3:13

molecules leave.

3:15

Everything dissolved in the water

3:17

every mineral every ion stays behind.

3:22

The water cycles.

3:23

The salt does not.

3:25

Over millions and then billions of

3:27

years, that one-way accumulation built

3:29

up. Salt in, but never fully out. That

3:33

is the foundation of why the ocean is

3:35

salty.

3:37

That makes sense.

3:39

But it creates another question. Rivers

3:41

have been feeding the ocean for billions

3:43

of years, carrying dissolved minerals

3:45

the entire time. Hydrothermal vents,

3:49

which we will get to in a moment, add

3:51

even more. So, why is the ocean not

3:53

getting saltier right now? Why has

3:56

salinity stayed relatively stable for

3:58

hundreds of millions of years? The

4:00

answer is that salt does leave the

4:02

ocean, just through mechanisms most

4:04

people never think about.

4:06

Sea spray carries salt particles into

4:08

the atmosphere, where they travel inland

4:10

and eventually settle on land. Certain

4:13

minerals crystallize out of the water

4:15

and sink to the ocean floor as sediment,

4:18

permanently removing them.

4:20

And there is a chemical concept called

4:22

residence time that explains exactly why

4:24

some elements dominate ocean chemistry

4:26

while others barely register.

4:29

Sodium has a residence time of around

4:31

260 million years. That means once a

4:34

sodium ion enters the ocean, it stays

4:36

there, on average for 260 million years

4:40

before being removed.

4:43

Chloride's residence time is even

4:44

longer.

4:45

This is why those two elements dominate.

4:48

Not because they are added in the

4:50

largest quantities but because they stay

4:53

the longest.

4:55

Iron, by contrast, has a residence time

4:57

of only about 200 years. It enters the

5:00

ocean and gets removed almost

5:02

immediately on a geological scale, which

5:04

is exactly why seawater is not full of

5:06

iron.

5:08

The ocean's chemistry is not random

5:10

accumulation. It is a balance

5:13

shaped by how fast things enter and how

5:16

fast they leave.

5:17

But rivers and rain are only part of the

5:19

story.

5:21

There is a second source of ocean salt

5:23

that scientists did not even know

5:24

existed until 1977.

5:27

That year, a deep-sea research

5:29

expedition near the Galapagos Islands

5:31

sent equipment down to the ocean floor

5:33

and found something nobody expected.

5:36

Along the mid-ocean ridges

5:39

the massive underwater mountain chains

5:40

that run across the floors of every

5:42

major ocean

5:44

tectonic plates are constantly pulling

5:46

apart.

5:47

And through the cracks left behind,

5:49

seawater seeps down into the ocean floor

5:52

and comes into contact with superheated

5:54

rock far beneath the surface.

5:56

That water gets heated to temperatures

5:58

exceeding 400° C.

6:01

At that temperature, intense chemical

6:03

reactions happen. The superheated water

6:05

pulls minerals and metals directly out

6:07

of the surrounding rock. Then that

6:09

mineral-loaded water shoots back up

6:11

through openings in the ocean floor

6:12

called hydrothermal vents.

6:14

Some of these vents release dark plumes

6:16

of hot, mineral-rich fluid into the

6:19

surrounding seawater.

6:20

Scientists call them black smokers.

6:24

Before 1977, nobody knew this was

6:26

happening.

6:28

The discovery completely changed how

6:29

scientists understood ocean chemistry

6:32

and where ocean salinity actually comes

6:34

from. Here is the scale of it. The

6:36

entire volume of ocean water cycles

6:39

through these hydrothermal vent systems

6:41

roughly once every 10 million years.

6:43

Over geological time, that process has

6:46

added an enormous amount of dissolved

6:47

material to the ocean. But this is where

6:50

things get interesting. Hydrothermal

6:52

vents do not only add minerals, they

6:54

also remove some. Certain ions already

6:57

dissolved in seawater react with the hot

6:59

rock during circulation and get pulled

7:02

out of the water entirely.

7:04

This means hydrothermal activity

7:06

functions as both a source and a filter,

7:08

adding some substances while stripping

7:11

out others. It acts as a long-term

7:13

chemical regulator for the entire ocean.

7:16

And then there is a third source that

7:18

operates separately from both rivers and

7:20

hydrothermal vents. There are an

7:22

estimated 1 million underwater volcanoes

7:25

on the ocean floor. Many of them are

7:27

active. When they erupt, they release

7:29

gases and minerals directly into the

7:31

surrounding water. One of the key

7:33

substances released is chloride.

7:36

One of the two primary components of

7:38

sodium chloride.

7:40

Volcanic outgassing, both underwater

7:43

and on land, has been supplying chloride

7:46

to the ocean throughout Earth's entire

7:48

history.

7:49

Three separate systems. Rivers carrying

7:52

dissolved rock minerals. Hydrothermal

7:55

vents cycling seawater through

7:57

superheated rock.

7:58

Underwater volcanoes releasing gases and

8:00

minerals directly. All of them feeding

8:02

the ocean. All of them running

8:04

simultaneously for billions of years. If

8:07

you want to see what happens when that

8:09

input has no balance at all, look at the

8:11

Dead Sea. The Dead Sea sits between

8:13

Jordan and Israel. Water flows in from

8:16

the Jordan River, but there is no

8:18

outlet. The only way water leaves is

8:20

through evaporation. And evaporation, as

8:22

established, leaves everything dissolved

8:24

behind. The result is a salinity of

8:26

approximately 34%, nearly 10 times

8:29

higher than the open ocean. The water is

8:32

so dense that the human body floats in

8:34

it with almost no effort.

8:36

The AC Great Salt Lake in Utah works the

8:39

same way. So does Lake Assal in

8:41

Djibouti, where salinity reaches up to

8:43

40%.

8:44

These are not exotic exceptions. They

8:46

are simply accelerated versions of the

8:48

same process happening in the ocean,

8:50

just in enclosed systems with no

8:52

chemical regulation to keep things

8:53

balanced.

8:55

Most freshwater lakes avoid this fate

8:57

because they have outlets. Water flows

9:00

in and flows out, carrying dissolved

9:02

minerals away before they accumulate.

9:05

The Great Lakes drain through the St.

9:06

Lawrence River into the Atlantic.

9:09

The continuous flow resets the

9:12

chemistry.

9:13

The ocean has no equivalent outlet.

9:16

Water leaves only through evaporation,

9:18

which purifies the water, but leaves the

9:21

salt permanently behind.

9:24

Now, here is the part that most sources

9:26

skip entirely.

9:28

Ocean salinity is not just a geological

9:30

fact.

9:31

It is one of the primary forces

9:33

regulating Earth's climate.

9:36

Saltier water is denser than fresher

9:38

[music] water.

9:39

That density difference drives

9:41

thermohaline circulation, the global

9:44

system of deep ocean currents that moves

9:47

heat around the entire planet. Without

9:49

it, Western Europe would be dramatically

9:51

colder than it is today.

9:53

The entire climate system depends in

9:55

part on the fact that the ocean is

9:57

salty.

9:58

Salt also lowers the freezing point of

10:01

seawater to around -1.8°C.

10:05

That keeps vast areas of the polar

10:07

oceans liquid even in extreme cold,

10:10

which sustains polar ecosystems and

10:12

plays a direct role in regulating global

10:14

temperatures.

10:15

And the implications stretch even beyond

10:17

Earth. NASA scientists studying Europa,

10:20

one of Jupiter's moons, have found

10:23

evidence of a liquid ocean beneath its

10:25

frozen surface.

10:26

The leading theory is that this ocean

10:28

may be salty, driven by the same

10:30

hydrothermal processes happening on

10:32

Earth's ocean floor. If confirmed, it

10:35

would mean a salty ocean is not unique

10:37

to Earth. It may be a natural

10:39

consequence of liquid water and rocky

10:41

geology existing together anywhere in

10:44

the universe.

10:45

The ocean is salty because rain is

10:48

slightly acidic.

10:49

And that acid has been dissolving

10:51

minerals out of rocks and delivering

10:52

them to the sea for billions of years.

10:55

It is salty because hydrothermal vents

10:57

on the ocean floor cycle seawater

10:59

through superheated rock, loading it

11:01

with dissolved minerals. It is salty

11:03

because underwater volcanoes have been

11:05

releasing chloride into the water

11:07

throughout Earth's entire history. And

11:09

it stays salty because when water

11:11

evaporates, it leaves everything behind.

11:14

The ocean has no drain, and that changes

11:16

everything. If you made it to the end of

11:18

this video, subscribe. There is a lot

11:20

more where this came from. And if any

11:22

part of this raised a question you still

11:24

want answered, drop it in the comments.

11:26

I will be there and I will reply.

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