Title: Water
1Water
2What is Water Pollution?
any physical (temperature, oxygen), chemical
(mercury), or biological (disease, sewage) change
to water that adversely effects its use by living
things
3Cuyahoga River, Ohio
Some river! Chocolate-brown, oily, bubbling with
subsurface gases, it oozes rather than flows.
"Anyone who falls into the Cuyahoga does not
drown," Cleveland's citizens joke grimly. "He
decays. Time Magazine, August 1969
November 1952
4Groundwater Pollution
5Types of Water Pollution
Measured in Percent () Parts per thousand
() Parts per million (ppm) Parts per billion
(ppb)
- Biological
- Chemical
- Physical
6Biological Water Pollution
Direct (microbes in water) Typhoid, cholera,
dysentery, hepatitis
- Infectious Disease(Pathogens)
- Oxygen-Demanding Waste
Entamoeba histolytica
7Biological Water Pollution
Indirect (Water breeding carriers)malaria,
yellow fever, west nile virus
- Infectious Disease(Pathogens)
- Oxygen-Demanding Waste
Treehole mosquito (carried La Crosse ensephalitis)
8Water Borne Disease
9U.S. Water Borne Disease
10Coliform Test
Detection
- Solutions
- Sewage treatment
- Immunization
11Biological Water Pollution
- Infectious Disease(Pathogens)
- Oxygen-Demanding Waste
12Dissolved Oxygen
Added by turbulent water and photosynthesis
Removed by Increased temperature (exsolution)
and respiration/decomposition
Good 6 ppm (mosquitoes can survive in 1
ppm)(also measured in of maximum - Good
60-80)
13Dissolved Carbon Dioxide
Added by respiration/decomposition weathered
rock
Removed by Increased temperature (exsolution)
and photosynthesis
Good 1-10 ppm (usually about 1 ppm)
14Oxygen Sag
15Measuring DO and other chemical properties
16Chemical Water Pollution
- Nutrients (Fertilizers)
- Toxic Inorganic Materials
- Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs)
Nitrogen, phosphorous
17Eutrophication
Blue Baby Syndrome
Dissolved inorganic nitrogen in Baltic Sea
18Nitrates
- Typically 0.1-4 ppm
- Unpolluted usually below 1 ppm
- Sewage pollution increase up to 20 ppm
19Chemical Water Pollution
- Heavy metals
- mercury,lead, tin
- Super Toxic Elements
- Arsenic, selenium
- Acids, salts, chlorine
- Radioactive Isotopes
- Nutrients (Fertilizers)
- Toxic Inorganic Materials
- Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs)
20Arsenic in U.S. Waters
21Some We Will Measure
- Copper
- natural, fungicides, insecticides, copper pipes
- can be lethal to some at 0.1 ppb, algae 1-10
ppb, fish 500ppb - water standard 0.3 ppm
- Acidity (pH)
- 6.5-8.2 normal (rainwater is usually a little
acidic) - 9 harmful to fish (inc. salmon)
- organics dont decay
22Some We Will Measure
- Salinity
- Saltwater 3.5
- Freshwater 1-500 ppm
- usually 100 ppm is bad for freshwater organisms
- 250 ppm tastes salty (max for drinking water)
- Total Dissolved Solids
- (Ca,Mg,Hco3, NH4, NO3, PO4, SO4, Na, Cl, Na, K)
- from dissolved rock, fertilizer, urban runoff,
irrigation, acid rainfall - watchdog high numbers or rapid changes may
indicate problem - typically 50-250 ppm
- Drinking water must be below 500 ppm
23Chemical Water Pollution
- Nutrients (Fertilizers)
- Toxic Inorganic Materials
- Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs)
24Artificial Chemicals
25The Dirty Dozen
26Physical Water Pollution
- Sediment
- Thermal Pollution
- Solid Waste
Yellow River, China
Chattahoochee River, GA
27Measured in
- NTU (Nephelometric Turbidity Units)
- Normal levels 1-50 NTU
- Drinking Water 0.5-1 NTU
- Visible 5 NTU
- Higher during storms
28Physical Water Pollution
- Causes
- industry
- dams
- removal of vegetation
- Sediment
- Thermal Pollution
- Solid Waste
Optimum Fish 5-20C (salmon
29Physical Water Pollution
- Sediment
- Thermal Pollution
- Solid Waste
30Pollution SourcesPoint Source
- Sewage pipes
- Leaky gas tanks
- Industrial sites
- Injection wells
31Pollution SourcesNonpoint Source
- Agriculture (soil, fertilizer,pesticides)
- Urban runoff (from pavement)
- Construction sites
- Air Pollution
32Controlling Water Quality
33Solutions
- Legislation
- Source Reduction
- Improved Land Use Practices
- Remediation
- Sewage Treatment
34Clean Water Act 1972
- Established water quality standards
- System for IDing point sources
- Pretreatment for industry
- Federal funding for sewage treatment
- Provided for enforcement
- Worked well for point sources
- Nonpoint sources still a problem
35Solutions
- Remove lead from gasoline
- Reduce road salting
- Decrease erosion
- Banning phosphates in detergents
- Reduce fertilizer use, etc.
- Legislation
- Source Reduction
- Improved Land Use Practices
- Remediation
- Sewage Treatment
36Solutions
- Stormwater treatment
- Reduce clearcutting
- Preserve wetlands
- Better construction practices
- Legislation
- Source Reduction
- Improved Land Use Practices
- Remediation
- Sewage Treatment
37Solutions
- Legislation
- Source Reduction
- Improved Land Use Practices
- Remediation
- Sewage Treatment
38Solutions
- Legislation
- Source Reduction
- Improved Land Use Practices
- Remediation
- Sewage Treatment
Water hyacinths absorb arsenic
39Solutions
- Legislation
- Source Reduction
- Improved Land Use Practices
- Remediation
- Sewage Treatment
West Point Treatment Plant, Seattle
40(No Transcript)
41Sewage in King County