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Water Pollution

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Water Pollution. Chapter 16. Some terms. Geochemical Cycles: ... Aeration: Bubbling or churning air or oxygen through oxygen starved water. Groundwater Pollution ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Water Pollution


1
Water Pollution
  • Chapter 16

2
Some terms
  • Geochemical Cycles
  • Movement of matter from one reservoir to another
  • Carbon Cycle, Rock Cycle, Calcium Cycle etc
  • Residence Time Capacity/Rate of influx
  • Higher solubility higher residence time
  • Higher residence timemore problematic

3
Source
  • Point Source Pollution Pollution released from a
    readily identifiable source e.g., a steel mill, a
    sewer outlet, a septic tank
  • Non Point Source Pollution Source of pollution
    diffuse, e.g., road salt, fertilizer from fields,
    automobile exhaust
  • Largest source of water quality problem
  • 40 of US water bodies not fit for fishing or
    swimming
  • Almost all the beaches in US are polluted

4
Leading Source of Water Quality Impairment
  • Agriculture is the leading contributor
  • Nutrient and sediments are the chief pollutant

5
Industrial Pollutants
  • 10 million new chemicals till date not enough
    time to test safety of each
  • Of 66,000 new drugs, pesticides and other
    industrial chemicals, no safety data exists on
    70 of them
  • MTBE (methyl tetraburate ethyl)
  • Added to gasoline for cleaner burning
  • Very soluble in water

6
Inorganic Pollutants Metals
  • Metal Often highly toxic, particularly the heavy
    metals (Hg, Cd, Pb, Pu, Zn)
  • Accumulate in bodies of animals and the
    concentration increases up a food chain
  • Minamata Tragedy in Japan
  • Fish at the top of food chain had 50 ppm Hg
  • By 1960 43 people died, 116 affected
  • Hatters Shake
  • Cadmium poisoning in Japan itai-itai
  • Lead another potent source of poisoning
  • Required substitution and regular monitoring

7
Other Inorganic Compounds
  • Chlorine harmful to aquatic life
  • Industrial Acids Now controlled
  • Asbestos Virulently carcinogenic

8
Organic Pollutants
  • Organics (carbon-bearing compounds)
  • Widespread use of herbicides and pesticides
  • Toxic, cumulative, carcinogenic
  • DDT(Dichloro diphenyl trichloroethane) repeated
    use results in resistant strains
  • Accumulative, toxic to fish, causes thinning of
    egg shells in birds banned in 1972
  • Oil Spills and leaks 10 million gallons in US
    waters every year
  • Plastics PCB (Polychlorinated biphenyls)
  • Caused birth defects and other ailments
  • Banned in US since 1977
  • 900 million pounds already been produced

9
Problem of Control
  • US industry produced 900 million tons of
    hazardous waste in 1984
  • Cost of cleaning increases exponentially
  • Even after cleaning stockpile of waste is
    produced which require careful handling

10
Thermal Pollution
  • From automobiles and heating systems in cities
  • From electric generating plants and cooling
    towers
  • Warm water contains less oxygen
  • May be harmful to some organisms (and beneficial
    to others)

11
Organic matter
  • Dead leaves, algae, human and animal waste,
    animal feed lots, food processing plants
  • Typically domestic, municipal, industrial and
    even storm run-offs, all come together in the
    sewer system and has potential to contaminate
    surface water
  • Aerobic decay (in presence of Oxygen) and
    Anerobic Decay (in absence of Oxygen, produces
    H2S and CH4 ) causes oxygen depletion

12
Biochemical Oxygen Demand
  • BOD (Biochemical Oxygen Demand) Amount of Oxygen
    required to breakdown organic matters
    aerobically. More organic matter in water, more
    BOD
  • Oxygen Sag Curve is produced when reoxygenation
    lags behind oxygen consumption more serious for
    lakes

13
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14
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15
Eutrophication
  • Breakdown of excess organic matter (or fertilizer
    runoff from farm lands or phosphates from
    detergents) also produces nitrates and phosphates
    which encourage growth of algae leading to algal
    bloom.
  • Dead algae sinks to bottom and further increases
    organic load and increase BOD
  • of eutrophic lakes in the farm belt
  • Iowa 100, Ohio84, major problem in the
    Florida Bay and in parts of Everglades

16
Agricultural Pollution
  • Fertilizers
  • Nitrates, phosphates and potash
  • Sediment Pollution
  • 3 billion tons / year in US
  • Reduces light, blankets bottom-habitats, fills up
    reservoirs, damages power plants
  • Herbicides and Pesticides
  • 500 million lbs/yr
  • Secondary breakdown products can be more toxic
  • Alternative strategies
  • Use only when needed
  • Use bacteria, sterilization or insect traps to
    control pests

17
Reversing the Damage
  • Dredging
  • Dig out the contaminated soil and put in
    landfills
  • Cost upto 10/m3
  • Physical Isolation
  • Cover with plastic or clay
  • Chemical treatment to fix nutrients
  • Decontamination
  • EPA filtered toxic organic herbicide laden water
    through activated charcoal and decontaminated
    Clarksburg Pond in NJ in 1974
  • Aeration Bubbling or churning air or oxygen
    through oxygen starved water

18
Groundwater Pollution
  • Out of sight, often go undetected by house owners
  • Generally slow spread of pollutants but rapid in
    karst terrains (like Central and South Florida)
  • Pesticides, nitrates mostly in agricultural
    belts, golf courses, public parks etc
  • Best if contained in source

19
Reversing the Damage Groundwater
  • Stop or reduce the flow of pollutants and then
    let nature take over
  • In situ decontamination site and pollutant
    specific
  • Heavy metals immobilization
  • Chemicals added through injection wells
  • Oxygen pumped for biological decontamination
  • Water table skimmed for petroleum products
  • Post extraction decontamination
  • Addition of alkalies to adjust pH ppt of heavy
    metals
  • Microbial treatment to breakdown organics
  • Air stripping aeration followed by separation of
    organic rich gas phase
  • Activated charcoal as filters

20
Love canal Origin
  • In 1942, Hooker Chemicals and Plastics
    Corporation (now Occidental Chemical) purchased
    the site of the Love Canal.
  • Between 1942 and 1953 Hooker Chemical disposed of
    about 22,000 tons of mixed chemical wastes into
    the Love Canal.
  • Shortly after Hooker ceased use of the site, the
    land was sold to the Niagara Falls School Board
    for a price of 1.00.
  • In 1955, the 99th Street Elementary School was
    constructed on the Love Canal property and opened
    its doors to students.
  • Subsequent development of the area would see
    hundreds of families take up residence in the
    suburban, blue-collar neighborhood of the Love
    Canal.

21
Original Love Canal site. Niagara River at the
bottom of the picture
Infrared aerial photo of Love Canal showing 99th
Street Elementary School and two rings of home
bordering the landfill
22
Love Canal Problem surfaces
  • Unusually heavy rain and snowfalls in 1975 and
    1976 provided high ground-water levels in the
    Love Canal area.
  • Portions of the Hooker landfill subsided,
    55-gallon drums surfaced, ponds and other surface
    water area became contaminated, basements began
    to ooze an oily residue, and noxious chemical
    odors permeated the area. Physical evidence of
    chemical corrosion of sump pumps and infiltration
    of basement cinder-block walls was apparent.
  • Subsequent studies by the Agency for Toxic
    Substances and Disease Registry would reveal a
    laundry list of 418 chemical records for air,
    water, and soil samples in and around the Love
    Canal area.

23
Love Canal Disaster
  • In April of 1978 the New York Department of
    Health Commissioner, Robert Whalen, declared the
    Love Canal area a threat to human health and
    ordered the fencing of the area near the actual
    old landfill site.
  • In August, the Health Commissioner declared a
    health emergency at the Love Canal, closed the
    99th Street School, and recommended temporary
    evacuation of pregnant women and young children
    from the first two rings of houses around the
    site.
  • Within a week, Governor Hugh Carey announced the
    intended purchase of all "Ring 1" houses (later
    expanded to 238 houses in Rings 1 and 2).
  • President Jimmy Carter simultaneously announced
    the allocation of federal funds and ordered the
    Federal Disaster Assistance Agency to assist the
    City of Niagara Falls to remedy the Love Canal
    site.

24
Love Canal Aftermath
  • Today, it remains a ghost town. The main dump
    site is fenced in (with a school and many homes
    bulldozed over and buried in the ground with the
    waste). Over the rest of the area of crumbling,
    dilapidated homes hangs a gaunt, eerie silence,
    reminding visitors of the specter that hazardous
    waste poses in our modern society.
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