Salt evaporation pond
A salt evaporation pond is a shallow artificial
During the process of salt winning, seawater or brine is fed into artificially created ponds from which water is drawn out by evaporation, allowing the salt to be subsequently harvested.[1]: 517 [2]
The ponds also provide a productive resting and feeding ground for many species of
Algae and color
Due to variable
Examples
Notable salt ponds include:
- The Salterns of Guérande, in Loire-Atlantique, France. The salt produced in the salterns are a protected geographical indication in Europe.
- The Cáhuil salt ponds, in the O'Higgins Region, Chile.
- The Manaure salt ponds, in La Guajira Department, Colombia.
- The Cusco Region.
- The saltworks of Alcácer do Sal, Comporta, and Castro Marim in Portugal
- The El Caracol solar evaporator, on the outskirts of Mexico City, Mexico.
- The Sečovlje and Strunjan salt ponds on the northern edge of the Adriatic Sea in Slovenia.
- The San Francisco Bay salt ponds in the United States, formerly operated by Cargill,[5][6][7][8] including Charleston Slough. Cargill has since ended salt production in the area, and most of the ponds are being restored to a more natural state.
- The .
- The salt ponds in Salina, Malta. The name of the village is the Malteseword for salt pan.
- The Port Hedland, Dampier, Lake McLeod, Useless Loop and Onslow salt ponds in Western Australia.
- Yellow Walls, Malahide, Ireland; active from 1770 to 1837.[9]
- Lake Grassmere in New Zealand
- The ancient salt pans in Marsala and Trapani, Sicily. Salt has been farmed here since the Phoenician period, with archaeological evidence still present in nearby Motya.
- The Nature reserve of Margherita di Savoia, in Apulia, Italy. Known since antiquity, it's one of the largest in Europe. Flamingos often nest in the area.
- The salt works on the island of Great Inagua owned by Morton Salt.
- The salt harvesting by the Tsonga women of Baleni on the Small Letaba River, Limpopo, South Africa.[10]
Until World War II, salt was extracted from sea water in a unique way in Egypt near Alexandria.[11] Posts were set out on the salt pans and covered with several feet of sea water. In time the sea water evaporated, leaving the salt behind on the post, where it was easier to harvest.
Production
Salt pans are shallow open, often metal, pans used to evaporate brine. They are usually found close to the source of the salt. For example, pans used in the solar evaporation of salt from sea water are usually found on the coast, while those used to extract salt from solution-mined brine will be found near to the brine shaft. In this case, extra heat is often provided by lighting fires underneath.
Gallery
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Natural salt evaporation ponds atSal island, Cape Verde
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A salt pan worker in a salt evaporation pond in Tamil Nadu, India.
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Contemporary solar evaporation salt pans on the island of Lanzarote at Salinas de Janubio
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Solar evaporation ponds in the Atacama Desert
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Solar evaporation ponds in the Salt Valley of Añana, Spain
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Solar evaporation ponds in the Salt Valley of Añana, Spain
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Salt pile in Argentina
See also
References
- OCLC 5889482841. Retrieved 27 February 2024.
- OCLC 9986402667. Retrieved 27 February 2024.
- ^ Athearn, Nicole D.; Takekawa, John Y.; and Shinn, Joel M. (2009) Avian response to early tidal salt marsh restoration at former commercial salt evaporation ponds in San Francisco Bay, California, USA, Natural Resources and Environmental Issues: Vol. 15, Article 14.
- ^ Ashon, Enimil (10 March 2017). "The Woman Who Saw Tomorrow". The Graphic. Accra, Ghana. Archived from the original on 25 February 2024. Retrieved 27 February 2024.
- ^ Napa Salt Pond Complex Archived 2011-08-19 at the Wayback Machine, The Bay Institute
- ^ Salt ponds, South San Francisco Bay, NASA Earth Observatory
- ^ "NASA Helps Reclaim 15,100 Acres Of San Francisco Bay Salt Ponds". Space Daily. Moffett Field. July 14, 2003.
- ^ "Cargill Salt - San Francisco Bay". Archived from the original on 2011-08-07. Retrieved 2011-08-09.
- ^ "The Salt Works". 19 July 2011.
- ^ "Baleni Cultural Camp". African Ivory Route. Transfrontier Parks Destinations. Retrieved 11 September 2019.
- ^ Salt, Grown On Sticks Harvested From Sea, Popular Science, March 1933