It’s the explanation for the beach Spongebob visits too
Comment on Give us your craziest ocean facts. 🦑
Baguette@lemm.ee 1 week ago
There are lakes in the ocean called brine lakes/pools. Brine is essentially concentrated saltwater; its high salinity means it’s denser than water. On rare occasions, brine doesn’t mix enough with the existing saltwater around it, sinking to the bottom of the ocean and forming these lakes. The lake itself is usually devoid of life; brine itself is so salty that animals go into toxic shock if exposed for too long. However, the edges usually are full of life, where usually things like mussels and other extremophile organisms thrive.
Side note, subnautica’s lost river is based off of this. No big leviathans in real life though, at least none observed yet…
Video for fun: youtu.be/ZwuVpNYrKPY
XiaCobolt@hexbear.net 1 week ago
LanguageIsCool@lemmy.world 1 week ago
Amazing
5too@lemmy.world 1 week ago
Wow, I had no idea these were a thing… and it’s so funky how the surface of the brine pool interacts with the surrounding seawater!
FooBarrington@lemmy.world 1 week ago
Similarly, SpongeBobs Goo Lagoon is a brine pool.
LovableSidekick@lemmy.world 1 week ago
It was never actually stated but I always assumed Goo Lagoon was industrial waste (“goo”). But SpongeBob creator Steve Hillenburg was a marine biologist who would have known all about brine pools, so that speculation is probably right.
Baguette@lemm.ee 1 week ago
Brine can be from industrial waste
Technically, brine just means a high concentration of salt in a fluid. It doesn’t necessarily have to be sodium chloride like we know, it can be other salts, like calcium chloride. Though the most common case for industrial brine is just desalination plants, other industries can still create brine, like mining/oil drilling. It also depends on how it’s released. Large amounts dumped at once is the reason for manmade brine pools.