Basics
- Salinity means the total content of dissolved salts in Sea or Ocean.
- Salinity is calculated as the amount of salt dissolved in 1,000 gm of seawater.
- It is generally expressed as ‘parts per thousand’ (ppt).
- A salinity of 24.7 % has been regarded as the upper limit to fix ‘brackish water’.
- The average salinity of the ocean is 35 parts of salt in 1000 parts of water.
Water Bodies with the Highest Salinity
|
Water Body |
Location |
| Lake Van (330 part per thousand) | Turkey |
| Dead Sea (240 part per thousand) | Israel – Jordan border |
| Great Salt Lake (220 part per thousand) | USA |
Share of Salt Dissolved in Ocean Water
|
Type of Salt |
Percentage |
| Sodium Chloride | 77.7% |
| Magnesium Chloride | 10.9% |
| Magnesium Sulphate | 4.7% |
| Calcium Sulphate | 3.6% |
| Potassium Sulphate | 2.5% |
Role of Ocean Salinity
- Salinity determines compressibility, thermal expansion, temperature, density, absorption of insolation, evaporation, and humidity.
- It also influences the composition and movement of the sea water and the distribution of fish and other marine resources.
Factors Determining Ocean Salinity
- Evaporation
- The salinity of water in the surface layer of oceans depends mainly on evaporation. Where the evaporation is greater, the salinity is higher.
- For example – Mediterranean sea because the sea is surrounded by landmass.
- Freshwater Inflow
- Where the freshwater flow into the oceans is greater, the salinity is lower.
- Major source of freshwater inflow is huge rivers and thawing of ice.
- For example – The Bay of Bengal is less saline than the Arabian Sea because Bay of Bengal receives huge inflow of freshwater from Ganga river system and east flowing peninsular rivers.
- Temperature and Density
- Salinity, temperature and density of water are interrelated. Hence, any change in the temperature or density influences the salinity of an area.
- The regions with high temperatures are also regions with high salinity.
- Ocean Currents
- The warm currents near the equatorial region push away the salts from the eastern margins of the oceans and accumulate them near the western margins.
- Ocean currents in the temperate regions increase the salinity of ocean waters near the eastern margins.
- For example, Gulf Stream in the North Atlantic Ocean increases the salinity of ocean waters along the western margins of the Atlantic Ocean.
- Atmospheric Pressure and Wind Direction
- Anti-cyclonic conditions with stable air and high temperature increase salinity of the surface water of oceans
Horizontal Distribution of Salinity
- The salinity for normal open ocean ranges between 33 and 37.
- Landlocked water bodies like the Red Sea have a salinity of 41.
- In the estuaries and the Arctic, the salinity fluctuates from 0 – 35, seasonally.
Vertical Distribution of Salinity
- Salinity changes with depth, but the way it changes depends upon the location of the sea.
- Salinity at the surface increases by the loss of water to ice or evaporation or decreases by the input of freshwaters, such as from the rivers.
- Salinity at depth is very much fixed because there is no way that water is ‘lost’, or the salt is ‘added.’ There is a marked difference in the salinity between the surface zones and the deep zones of the oceans.
- The lower salinity water rests above the higher salinity dense water.
- Salinity, generally, increases with depth and there is a distinct zone called the halocline (compare this with thermocline), where salinity increases sharply.
- Other factors being constant, increasing the salinity of seawater causes its density to increase. Higher salinity seawater, generally, sinks below the lower salinity water. This leads to stratification by salinity.

