Classroom lesson · The Dead Sea · 🇵🇸 Palestine

The Dead Sea

The lowest place on Earth - and you float without trying!

A person floating effortlessly on the glassy surface of the Dead Sea

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

The Dead Sea is a very salty lake that sits at the lowest point on the surface of the entire Earth - about 430 metres below sea level. It is so salty and so dense that every person who steps in floats straight to the top without even trying. You can sit and read a book while bobbing in the water!

Tell me more

The Dead Sea is nearly ten times saltier than normal ocean water. All that salt makes the water incredibly dense and thick, which is why your body pops up to the surface like a cork. No fish or plants can live in water this salty - that is how it got its name - but the shore is ringed with beautiful date palms and the water itself sparkles a brilliant turquoise-blue.

The mud at the bottom of the Dead Sea is rich in minerals and has been famous for thousands of years. Ancient Egyptians and Roman traders came from far away to collect it. Today, people still scoop the dark mud onto their skin, let it dry in the sunshine, and then rinse off - the minerals leave skin feeling very smooth.

Because the Dead Sea is so far below sea level, the air above it is thicker and filters out more of the sun's harmful rays than anywhere else on Earth. This means you can sit in the sun there for longer without burning as quickly. Scientists study the Dead Sea to learn about extreme environments, and some use the very salty water to grow special plants and crystals in laboratories.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Why do you think something very salty makes you float? What other liquids might make things sink or float differently?
  2. 02If you could float effortlessly in water, what book would you bring to read while bobbing?
  3. 03The Dead Sea has no fish - how do you think the plants and birds near its shore survive without the usual food chain?
Try this

Classroom activity

Try a floating experiment at home or school! Fill a bowl with warm water and stir in lots of table salt. Drop in a raw egg - it sinks in plain water, but can float in very salty water. Draw what you see and explain why.