Upload
angela-holt
View
231
Download
3
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
Freshwater Freshwater PollutionPollution
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lgLIMaZAJj0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zNdbj3PbX6o
Will the pollution reach your wells?
Supplies needed: A partner (the person
sitting next to you from your group)
Permanent Marker Aquifer (coffee filter) Paper plate (do not throw
away)
Artificial rain Pollution (food coloring)
Think about this before it rains…
Which wells could be affected by the pollution?
Are all wells affected the same?
What is water pollution? (1st)What things could make water polluted?
Factory waste
Car exhaustChemicals from landfills
plastics
fuel
litter
sewage
styrofoam
Scrap metals
What is water pollution?(2nd) What things could make water polluted?
sewage
Oil/fuel leaks
plastics
Toxic waste
pesticides
Household waste
Scrap metal
Medical waste
Heavy metals
What is water pollution?(3rd) What things could make water polluted?
Factory waste
fertilizers
Nuclear waste
sewage
drilling
fracking
Waste water
landfills
What is water pollution?(4th) What things could make water polluted?
Plastic
Oil
Trash/Litter
Scrap Metal
Toxic Waste
Sewage
Chemicals
Landfills
What is water pollution?(6th) What things could make water polluted?
sewage
Factory waste
Smoke/exhaust
Nuclear waste
plastics
Bio-waste
Marine waste
Residential garbage
What is water pollution?
• Water pollution is the addition of any substance that has a negative effect on water or the living things that depend on the water.
• It can affect surface water, groundwater, and rain.
• It can result from both natural causes and human activities.
Origins of Water Pollution
• Human wastes
• Industrial wastes
• Agricultural chemicals
• Runoff from roads
Point vs. Nonpoint Sources
• Each source of pollution can be a point source or nonpoint source, depending on how the pollution enters a body of water.
• Point source = a specific source of pollution that can be identified (ex. A pipe gushing dirty water into a river)
• Nonpoint source = a widely spread source of pollution that is difficult to link to a specific point of origin (ex. road runoff)
Problem solving…
Explain why finding the source of water pollution can be difficult.
• The pollution source may be widespread and/or far away from the polluted water.
• Pollutants may dissolve and move throughout a body of water.
• Sources such as gasoline tanks may be hidden underground.
Human Wastes
• Our wastewater is treated before being released to the environment but some viruses and parasites resist the treatment processes.
• During a flood, sanitary sewers can overflow into storm sewers and pollute surface waters.
• Septic tanks must be located in the right spot to avoid wastewater leakage.
• Waste from farm animals can pollute water.
Something to think about…
What is wrong with this picture?
Drinking water should be kept separate from sewage. Sewage contains bacteria, viruses, and parasites that can cause disease.
Industrial Wastes• Chemicals are released into rivers/lakes and
also stored in ways that are a hazard.
• Factories burn coal or oil while cars, trucks, and buses burn gasoline = acid rain
• Factories release warm water into rivers raising the temperature of the water.
Agricultural Chemicals
• Farmers use fertilizer, it rains, some chemicals wash away as runoff.
• Extra fertilizer encourages the growth of plants and algae around water.
• Pesticides are chemicals intended to kill insects and other organisms that damage crops. They may end up as run off or be sprayed directly on ponds.
Agricultural question for you…
• How can chemicals used in agriculture reach streams, ponds, and lakes?
When rain falls on the fields, it washes some of the chemicals away as runoff. The runoff eventually reaches streams, ponds, and lakes.
Runoff from Roads• Cars leak gasoline and oil. When it rains
these oily substances are washed off along with the runoff.
• In the winter, runoff picks up salt that is sprinkled on roads and sidewalks to melt ice.
• These substances can pollute rivers and lakes and seep down into groundwater and pollute wells or aquifers.
Create a chart to show how gasoline, oil, or salt can travel from the surface of the road to a lake or aquifer (a source of drinking water).
Car leaks oil onto the road
Rain washes the oil into a permeable area
Water and oil seep down into an aquifer
A well is installed into the aquifer
This well provides you with your drinking water
Cleaning Up Polluted Waters
• Some pollutants are eventually removed from freshwater naturally. Living things in lakes, streams, and wetlands filter out and break down waste materials.
• Some pollutants are difficult to remove so just avoid causing the pollution in the first place!
• https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aWC0c0h2jSM