Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

CH. 20: WATER POLLUTION By: Alexa Tsaganos and Cricket Slattery.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "CH. 20: WATER POLLUTION By: Alexa Tsaganos and Cricket Slattery."— Presentation transcript:

1 CH. 20: WATER POLLUTION By: Alexa Tsaganos and Cricket Slattery

2 Core Case Study: Lake Washington

3 20.1 What are the Causes and Efects of Water Pollution? Key terms: Water pollution, Point sources, non point sources

4 20.1 Key Focus Water pollution causes illness and death in humans and other species and disrupts ecosystems

5 20.1 Key Focus The chief sources of water pollution are agricultural activities, industrial facilities, and mining, but growth in population and resource use makes it increasing worse

6 Major Water Pollutants and Their Sources Infectious agents (pathogens)  Human and animal wastes Oxygen-demanding wastes  sewage, animal feedlots, food processing facilities, pulp mills Plant nutrients  sewage, animal wastes, inorganic fertilizaers Organic chemicals  industry, farms, households Inorganic chemicals  Industry, households, surface runoff Sediments  land erosion Heavy metals  unlined landfills, household chemicals, minign refuse, industrila discharges Thermal  electric power and industrial plants

7 Common Diseases Transmitted to Humans, through contaminated Drinking Water Bacteria: typhoid fever, cholera, bacterial dysentery, enteritis Viruses: infectious hepatitis (type B), poliomyelitis Parasitic protozoa: amoebic dysentery, giardiasis, cryptosporidum Parasitic worms: schistosomiasis, ancylostomiasis

8 Science Focus: Testing Water For Pollutants Indicators of water quality: ½ cup of water must contain no colonies of coliform bacteria (for drinking), level of dissolved oxygen (good: 8-9 ppm at 20 degrees celsius) Gravely polluted if DO < 4 ppm Chemical analysis, indicator species, genetic engineering, colorimeters, turbidity

9 20.2 What Are the Major Water Pollution Problems in Streams and Lakes? Key terms: eutrophication, cultural eutrophication

10 20.2 What Are the Major Water Pollution Problems in Streams and Lakes? While streams are extensively polluted worldwide by human activities, they can cleanse themselves of many pollutants if we do not overload them or reduce their flows.

11 20.2 Key Focus Addition of excessive nutrients to lakes from human activities can disrupt lake ecosystems, and prevention of such pollution is more effective and less costly to clean up.

12 Individuals Matter John Beal and Hamm Creek

13 Case Study India’s Ganges River: Religion, Poverty, Population Growth, and Health

14 Case Study Pollution in the Great Lakes

15 20.3 What Are the Major Pollution Problems Affecting Groundwater and Other Drinking Water Sources? Chemicals used in agriculture, industry, transportation, and homes can spill and leak into groundwater and make it undrinkable.

16 20.3 Key Focus There are simple ways and complex ways to purify drinking water, but protecting it through pollution prevention is the least expensive and most effective strategy.

17 Case Study A Natural Threat from Arsenic in Groundwater

18 Case Study Protecting Watersheds Instead of Building Water Purification Plants

19

20 20.3 Solutions: Groundwater Pollution Prevention: Find subsitutes for toxic chemicals, keep toxic chemicals out of the environment, install monitorign wells near landfills and underground tanks, require leak detectors on underground tanks, Ban hazardous waste disposal in landfills and injection wells, store harmful tanks with leak detection and collection systems Cleanup: Pump to surface, clean, and return to aquifer (very expensive), inject microorganisms to clean up contamination (less expensive but still costly), Pump nanoparticles of inorganic compounds to remove polutants (still being devloped)

21 20.4 What Are The Major Water Pollution Problems Affecting Oceans? Key Terms: harmful algae blooms, oxygen-depleted zones, dead zones, crude petroleum, refined petroleum

22 20.4 Key Focuses Ocean pollution originates on land and includes oil and other toxic chemicals and solid wastes, which threaten aquatic species and other wildlife and disrupt marine ecosystems. The key to protecting the oceans is to reduce the flow of pollutants from land and air and from streams emptying into these waters. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QxGLnGN67wo

23 20.4 Ocean pollution is a growing problem – cruise ships – Viruses – Harmful algae blooms Ocean oil pollution is serious – Exxon Valdez – Prestige – Volatile organic hydrocarbons – Cleanup

24 Oxygen-depleted Zones

25 20.5 How Can We Best Deal with Water Pollution? Key Terms: septic tank, primary sewage treatment, secondary sewage treatment

26 20.5 Key Focuses Reducing water pollution requires preventing it, working with nature to treat sewage, cutting resource use and waste, reducing poverty, and slowing population growth. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TDi0g0 msG58 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TDi0g0 msG58

27 20.5 We need to reduce surface water pollution form nonpoint sources – Organic farming techniques – Pesticides Laws can help reduce water pollution from point sources – Federal Water Pollution Control Act of 1972 (later named the Clean Water Act) – 1987 Water Quality Act – Discharge Trading Policy

28 20.5 continued The US experience with reducing point-source pollution – Improvements from the Clean Water Act – Prevention Sewage treatment reduces water pollution – Septic tank – Primary sewage treatment – Secondary sewage treatment – Advanced or tertiary sewage treatment

29 Primary and Secondary Sewage Treatment


Download ppt "CH. 20: WATER POLLUTION By: Alexa Tsaganos and Cricket Slattery."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google