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  2. Sea spray - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sea_spray

    Connection between sea foam and sea spray formation. The dark orange line indicates processes common to the formation of both sea spray and sea foam. When wind, whitecaps, and breaking waves mix air into the sea surface, the air regroups to form bubbles, floats to the surface, and bursts at the air-sea interface. [10]

  3. Sodium chloride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sodium_chloride

    Salt is also used a seasoning agent, e.g. in potato chips, pretzels, and cat and dog food. [10] Sodium chloride is used in veterinary medicine as emesis-causing agent. It is given as warm saturated solution. Emesis can also be caused by pharyngeal placement of small amount of plain salt or salt crystals.

  4. Weathering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weathering

    Salt crystallization (also known as salt weathering, salt wedging or haloclasty) causes disintegration of rocks when saline solutions seep into cracks and joints in the rocks and evaporate, leaving salt crystals behind. As with ice segregation, the surfaces of the salt grains draw in additional dissolved salts through capillary action, causing ...

  5. Salt (chemistry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salt_(chemistry)

    Individual ions within a salt usually have multiple near neighbours, so they are not considered to be part of molecules, but instead part of a continuous three-dimensional network. Salts usually form crystalline structures when solid. Salts composed of small ions typically have high melting and boiling points, and are hard and brittle.

  6. Sea salt aerosol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sea_salt_aerosol

    Very small sea salt aerosols, which are below the critical diameter for droplet activation at low supersaturations, can serve as nuclei for the growth of sulfate particles, while larger sea salt particles serve as a sink for gaseous hydrogen sulfate (H 2 SO 4) molecules, reducing the amount of sulfate available for the formation of accumulation ...

  7. Haloclasty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haloclasty

    Haloclasty (also called salt weathering) is a type of physical weathering caused by the growth and thermal expansion of salt crystals. The process starts when saline water seeps into deep cracks and evaporates depositing salt crystals. When the rocks are then heated, the crystals will expand putting pressure on the surrounding rock which will ...

  8. Halite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halite

    Halite crystals form very quickly in some rapidly evaporating lakes resulting in modern artifacts with a coating or encrustation of halite crystals. [14] Halite flowers are rare stalactites of curling fibers of halite that are found in certain arid caves of Australia 's Nullarbor Plain . [ 15 ]

  9. Salt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salt

    When used in food, especially in granulated form, it is more formally called table salt. In the form of a natural crystalline mineral, salt is also known as rock salt or halite. Salt is essential for life in general (being the source of the essential dietary minerals sodium and chlorine), and saltiness is one of the basic human tastes.