water pollution
Any physical or chemical change in surface water or groundwater that can harm living organisms or make water unfit for certain uses.
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Any physical or chemical change in surface water or groundwater that can harm living organisms or make water unfit for certain uses.
See advanced sewage treatment.
Slow or rapid sinking of part of the earth's crust that is not slope related.
Flowing body of surface water. Examples are creeks and rivers.
Gooey mixture of toxic chemicals, infectious agents, and settled solids removed from wastewater at a sewage treatment plant.
Underground tank for treating wastewater from a home in rural and suburban areas. Bacteria in the tank decompose organic wastes, and the sludge settles to the bottom of the tank. The effluent flows out of the tank into the ground through a field of drainpipes.
Second step in most waste treatment systems in which aerobic bacteria break down up to 90% of degradable, oxygen-demanding organic wastes in wastewater. This usually involves bringing sewage and bacteria together in trickling filters or in the activated sludge process. Compare advanced sewage treatment, primary sewage treatment.
Mechanical sewage treatment in which large solids are filtered out by screens and suspended solids settle out as sludge in a sedimentation tank. Compare advanced sewage treatment, secondary sewage treatment.
Single identifiable source that discharges pollutants into the environment. Examples are the (1) smokestack of a power plant or an industrial plant, (2) drainpipe of a meatpacking plant, (3) chimney of a house, or (4) exhaust pipe of an automobile. Compare nonpoint source.
Number of parts of a chemical found in 1 trillion parts of a particular gas, liquid, or solid.
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