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Presentation on water pollution

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Environmental Geology, November 8 Revision of the syllabus: Wednesday, 11/8—Groundwater pollution Friday, 11/10—Groundwater pollution Monday, 11/13--Wetlands
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Page 1: Presentation on water pollution

Environmental Geology, November 8

Revision of the syllabus:

Wednesday, 11/8—Groundwater pollution

Friday, 11/10—Groundwater pollution

Monday, 11/13--Wetlands

Page 2: Presentation on water pollution

Supply of Water ResourcesSupply of Water Resources

Fig. 15-2 p. 307Fig. 15-2 p. 307

FreshwaterFreshwater Readily accessible freshwaterReadily accessible freshwater

Biota0.0001%

Biota0.0001%

Rivers0.0001%Rivers

0.0001%

Atmosphericwater vapor

0.0001%

Atmosphericwater vapor

0.0001%

Lakes0.0007%

Soilmoisture0.0005%

Groundwater0.592%

Groundwater0.592%

Ice capsand glaciers

0.592%

0.014%0.014%

Page 3: Presentation on water pollution

Use of Water ResourcesUse of Water Resources

Humans use about 54% of reliable runoff Humans use about 54% of reliable runoff

Agriculture Agriculture

Industry Industry

Domestic Domestic

Power plants Power plants

Fig. 15-4 p. 309Fig. 15-4 p. 309

United States

Industry 11%

Public 10%

Powercooling

38%

Agriculture38%

Page 4: Presentation on water pollution

Evaporation and transpiration

Evaporation

Stream

Infiltration

Water tableInfiltration

Unconfined aquifer

Confined aquifer

Lake

Well requiring a pump

Flowingartesian well

Runoff

Precipitation

ConfinedRecharge Area

Aquifer

Less permeable materialsuch as clay Confirming permeable rock layer

Ground WaterGround Water

Fig. 15-3 p. 308

Page 5: Presentation on water pollution

Water ResourcesWater Resources

• Over the last century– Human population has increased 3x– Global water withdrawal has increased 7x– Per capita water withdrawal has increased 4x

– About one-sixth of the world’s people don’t have easy access to safe water

– Most water resources are owned by governments and are managed as publicly owned resources

Page 6: Presentation on water pollution

Too Little WaterToo Little Water

Dry climateDry climate

Drought Drought

DesiccationDesiccation

Water stressWater stress

Acute shortage

Adequate supply

Shortage

Metropolitan regions with population greater than 1 million

Fig. 15-6 p. 310Fig. 15-6 p. 310

Page 7: Presentation on water pollution

Human water needsHuman water needs

• A person needs about 1 gallon water/day for hydration

• In the US each person uses about 188 gallons/day• An additional 657 gallons/person/day are used for

irrigation, industrial use. • Total per capita use is about 2000 gal/person/day• If world’s water supply were 100 liters, the usable

supply would be about 0.5 tsp• US has highest per capita water withdrawal, followed

by Canada, Australia, Russia, Japan

Page 8: Presentation on water pollution

Problems with Using GroundwaterProblems with Using Groundwater

Water table loweringWater table lowering

DepletionDepletion

SubsidenceSubsidence

Saltwater intrusionSaltwater intrusion

Chemical contaminationChemical contamination

Reduced stream flowsReduced stream flows

Page 9: Presentation on water pollution

Groundwater Pollution Groundwater Pollution

• >70,000 chemicals are used not; effects of many are not known

• Each year another 700-800 new chemicals are produced

• 55 million tons of hazardous chemical wastes are produced in the US each year

• The 20 most abundant compounds in groundwater at industrial waste disposal sites include TCE, benzene, vinyl chloride…all are carcinogens, and also affect liver, brain, and nervous system

Page 10: Presentation on water pollution

Kinds of Water PollutionKinds of Water Pollution

• Inorganic Pollutants

• Organic Pollutants

• Biologic Pollutants

Page 11: Presentation on water pollution

Inorganic PollutantsInorganic Pollutants

• Examples:• Pb in gasoline

• Radionuclides

• Phosphorus, nitrogen (Great Lakes)

• Other heavy metals

Page 12: Presentation on water pollution

Inorganic PollutantsInorganic Pollutants

• 3 groups• 1) Produce no heavlth effects until a threshold

concentration is exceeded—e.g., NO3 –ook at , 50mg/liter; at higher levels: methaemoglobinaemia

• 2) No threshold—e.g.—genotoxic substances: some natural and synthetic organic compounds, microorganic compunds, some pesticides, arsenic

• 3) Essential to diets: F, I, Se—absence causes problems, but too much also causes problems

Page 13: Presentation on water pollution

Inorganic Trace ContaminantsInorganic Trace Contaminants

• Mercury—methyl Hg and dimethyl Hg in fish—probably most significant path to humans—Minamata Bay, Japan, 1950’s

• Rhine River drains 185,000 sq km—heavily polluted by 1970’s

• Lead—toxicity has been known for a long time– 1859 book– Tetraethyl lead—anti-knowck additive for gas,

1930-1966

Page 14: Presentation on water pollution

RadionuclidesRadionuclides

• Bikini Atoll in South Pacific: > 20 tests, 1946-1958– Inhabitants evacuated before 1946 tests; their

descendents are still exiled– Atmospheric testing of nuclear weapons is now

banned

National labs…now trying to clean up (Hanford)

Page 15: Presentation on water pollution

Phosphates and NitratesPhosphates and Nitrates

• Phosphates—mostly a result of sewage outflow and phosphate detergents– Additional phosphate grows excess algae…oxygen

depletion, Lake Erie…1972 phosphate management plant…$7.6 billion

• Nitrates—sewage and fertilizers

Page 16: Presentation on water pollution

Case Study: The Great LakesCase Study: The Great Lakes

Page 17: Presentation on water pollution

How water is usedHow water is used

• In the western US, irrigation makes up 85% of all water use

--50% to grow food for livestock

-- 35% to grow crops

Not sustainable…cost of water is heavily subsidized by the federal government

Page 18: Presentation on water pollution

Organic PollutantsOrganic Pollutants

• Three classes of compounds– Pesticides and Herbicides– Materials for common household and industrial

use– Materials for industrial use

Page 19: Presentation on water pollution

Scale of Pesticide Use in USScale of Pesticide Use in US

• Since 1959: 50-fold increase in pesticide use

• Most present pesticides are 10-100 x more toxic than those used in 1050’s

• About 25% of pesticide use in US is in houses, gardens, lawns, parks, swimming pools, and golf courses

• Average lawn receives 10x more pesticides than equivalent area of cropland

Page 20: Presentation on water pollution

Pesticides--morePesticides--more

• Each year about 250,000 people are admitted to hospitals and/or emergency rooms with pesticide poisoning

• Broad spectrum vs narrow spectrum

• Persistence

Page 21: Presentation on water pollution

Each Year in the USEach Year in the US

• About 2.4 million tons of pesticides are used

• 600 active chemicals mixes with 1200 solvents, ‘inactive’ ingredients

• About 25000 commercial pesticide products

Page 22: Presentation on water pollution

PesticidesPesticides

• Chlorinated hydrocarbons– DDT, heptachlor, etc—2-15 years

• Organophosphates– Malathion, methyl parathion—1-2 weeks

• Carbamates– Carbaryl, maneb, aldicarb—days to weeks

• Pyrethroids– Pemethrin, decamethrin—days to weeks

Page 23: Presentation on water pollution

HerbicidesHerbicides

ContactTriazines—e.g. atrazine, paraquat

(interfere with photosynthesis)Systemic—phenoxy compounds, N compounds, Alar,

glyphosate(create excess growth hormones)

Soil sterilantstrifluralin, dalapon

(kill soil microorganisms)

Page 24: Presentation on water pollution

Advantages of Modern PesticidesAdvantages of Modern Pesticides

• Save human lives (malaria, bubonic plague, typhoid fever)

• Increase food supplies (even now 55% of world’s potential food supply is ‘lost’ to other species)

• Increase profit for farmers ($1investment $4 increased profit

• They work fast

Page 25: Presentation on water pollution

Disadvantages of Modern PesticidesDisadvantages of Modern Pesticides

• They accelerate the development of genetic resistance to pesticides by pest organisms

Since 1945, ~1000 species of insects and rodents and 550 species of weeds and plant diseases

• They can put farmers on a financial treadmill• Some kill natural predators and parasites that control

‘pests’– 300 most destructive insects in US: 100 were once minor

• They don’t stay put—only 0.1 to 2% of stuff applied reaches target insect, 5%

reaches target plant—the rest—into air, water, humans, wildlife

Page 26: Presentation on water pollution

Disadvantages, continuedDisadvantages, continued

• Harm wildlife– USDA, USFWS: each year pesticides wipe out about 20%

of honeybee population, damage another 15%, losing US farmers about $200 million/yr. Kill 6-14 million fish, ~67 million birds/year

• Threaten human health--Poison 3.5-5 million workers in developing countries, and at least 300,000 in US; cause about 20000-40000 deaths (about 25 in US) per year. Prob greatly underestimated.--In food causes about 4000-20000 cases of cancer/year in US (Nat’l Academy of Sciences); genetic mutations, birth defects, nervous systems disorders, endocrine disorders.

Page 27: Presentation on water pollution

How they’re regulatedHow they’re regulated

• EPA, USDA, FDA• Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (1947,

1972)• Fewer than 10% of active ingredients have been evaluated• 1996—Food Quality Protection Act—Requires EPA to reduce

allowed levels of residues on food by a factor of 10 if inadequate info about effects on children

• Poor enforcement; National Academy study: ~98% of potential cancer risk would be eliminated if EPA standards were as strict for pre-1972 chemicals as they are for later ones.

• Big problem—chemicals banned in US can be manufactured here and shipped to other countries

Page 28: Presentation on water pollution

Roundup (glyphosate)Roundup (glyphosate)

• Two recent studies: Roundup disrupts hormones and is associated with birth defects in humans

• Farm families that applied pesticides to their crops in Minnesota were studied to see if their elevated exposure to pesticides caused birth defects in their children. Both fungicides and the herbicide Roundup -- were linked to statistically significant increases in birth defects. Roundup was linked to a 3-fold increase in neurodevelopmental (attention deficit) disorders. (Environmental Health Perspecitves, v 110, p. 441-449)

• Roundup interferes with a fundamental protein StAR (steroidogenic acute regulatory protein). The StAR protein is key to the production of testosterone in men (thus controlling male characteristics, including sperm production) but also the production of adrenal hormone (essential for brain development), carbohydrate metabolism (leading to loss or gain of weight), and immune system function. The authors point out that "a disruption of the StAR protein may underlie many of the toxic effects of environmental pollutants." [EHP Vol. 108, No. 8 (August 2000), pgs. 769-776.]

Page 29: Presentation on water pollution

Organic PollutantsOrganic Pollutants

• Three classes of compounds– Pesticides and Herbicides– Materials for common household and industrial

use– Materials for industrial use

Page 30: Presentation on water pollution

PCB’sPCB’s

• Polychlorinated biphenyls

• 1940’s-1977: GE

• Congress banned production of PCB’s in 1979 b/c highly toxic to fish and mammals

• Striped bass in NY, Long Island—PCB’s>5 ppm; ban on commercial fishing; Great Lakes

Page 31: Presentation on water pollution

Monitoring water qualityMonitoring water quality

• Number of colonies of fecal coliform bacteria

• Bacterial source tracking (BST)

• Measure biological oxygen demand (BOD)

• Chemical analysis

• Indicator species

• Genetic development of indicator organisms

Page 32: Presentation on water pollution

Biologic ContaminantsBiologic Contaminants

• Greater obvious problems than organic and inorganic contaminants in US

• April, 1993, Milwaukee—cryptosporidium (parasite)—source: water plant with a water intake pipe <2mi from a sewage treatment plant; 400,000 ill people, 42 deaths

Page 33: Presentation on water pollution

Scale of Biologic Contaminant ProblemScale of Biologic Contaminant Problem

• Major cause of infant deaths in third world

• Diarrhea kills 4-15 million children/year

• Bacteria, viruses, parasites

• Tables 12-9 and 12-10 from Holland and Peterson

Page 34: Presentation on water pollution

Federal Water LegislationFederal Water Legislation

• Refuse Act of 1899Refuse only into ‘navigable water’

• Federal Water and Pollution Control Act of 1956

• Fish and Wildlife Coordination Act of 1958consider wildlife in water projects

• National Environmental Policy Act of 1969require environmental impact statements

Page 35: Presentation on water pollution

Legislation, continuedLegislation, continued

• Water Quality Improvement Act of 1970--control of oil pollution; work to eliminate acid mine drainage, pollution of Great Lakes

• CLEAN WATER ACT OF 1972--billions of $ to clean up nation’s waters; modern sewage treatment plants—huge affect

• Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980---superfund!

Page 36: Presentation on water pollution

More legislationMore legislation

• Hazardous and Solid Waste Amendments to CERCLA of 1984--regulates underground storage tanks

• Water Quality Act of 1987--national policy for controllling nonpoint sources of water pollution

• Safe Drinking Water Act of 1996--risk-based water quality standards, consumer awareness

Page 37: Presentation on water pollution

Love CanalLove Canal

• Landfill near Niagara Falls, NY• Hooker Chemicals and Plastics Corporation put

wastes in abandoned canal, covered it, deeded 16 acres to Niagara Falls Board of Education in 1953.

• Elementary school built on site; houses built around school

• 1976—chemicals leaking into basements• Env emergency declared in 1978• State and federal gov’ts bought >500 contaminated

houses in 1980; 1989 people began to return

Page 38: Presentation on water pollution

Types, Effects and Sources of Water PollutionTypes, Effects and Sources of Water Pollution

Point sourcesPoint sources

Nonpoint sourcesNonpoint sources

Water qualityWater qualityFig. 22-3 p. 494Fig. 22-3 p. 494

Page 39: Presentation on water pollution

Point and Nonpoint SourcesPoint and Nonpoint Sources

NONPOINT SOURCES

Urban streets

Suburban development

Wastewater treatment plant

Rural homes

Cropland

Factory

Animal feedlot

POINT SOURCES

Fig. 22-4 p. 494

Page 40: Presentation on water pollution

$23 billion/year for 8-10 years to bring clean drinking water to those who don’t have it

$23 billion/year for 8-10 years to bring clean drinking water to those who don’t have it

• Consequences of a warmer world

• Pollution of freshwater streams

• Dilution and biodegradatoin

• Breakdown of pollutants by bacteria—oxygen sag curve

Page 41: Presentation on water pollution

Point source vs non-point source pollution; developed vs non-developed

Developing countries: half of world’s 500 major rivers are heavily polluted

Page 42: Presentation on water pollution

MississippiRiver Basin

MissouriRiver

OhioRiver

MississippiRiver

LOUISIANAMississippi

River

Depleted

Oxygen

Gulf of Mexico

Page 43: Presentation on water pollution

Solutions: Preventing and Reducing Surface Water PollutionSolutions: Preventing and Reducing Surface Water Pollution

Nonpoint SourcesNonpoint Sources Point SourcesPoint Sources

Reduce runoffReduce runoff

Buffer zone vegetation

Buffer zone vegetation

Reduce soil erosionReduce soil erosion

Clean Water ActClean Water Act

Water Quality ActWater Quality Act

Page 44: Presentation on water pollution

Pollution of LakesPollution of Lakes

Eutrophication Eutrophication

Fig. 22-7 p. 499

Page 45: Presentation on water pollution

Groundwater Pollution: CausesGroundwater Pollution: Causes

Low flow rates Low flow rates Few bacteria Few bacteria Cold temperatures Cold temperatures

Coal strip mine runoff

Pumping well

Waste lagoon

Accidental spills

Groundwater flow

Confined aquifer

Discharge

Leakage from faulty casing

Hazardous waste injection well

Pesticides

Gasoline station

Buried gasoline and solvent tank

Sewer

Cesspool septic tank

De-icing road salt

Unconfined freshwater aquifer

Confined freshwater aquifer

Water pumping well Landfill

Low oxygen Low oxygen

Fig. 22-9 p. 502

Page 46: Presentation on water pollution

Groundwater Pollution PreventionGroundwater Pollution Prevention

Monitor aquifers Monitor aquifers

Leak detection systems Leak detection systems

Strictly regulating hazardous waste disposal Strictly regulating hazardous waste disposal

Store hazardous materials above ground Store hazardous materials above ground

Find less hazardous substitutes Find less hazardous substitutes

Page 47: Presentation on water pollution

One or more organic chemicals contaminate about 45% of municipal groundwater supplies in the US

About 26000 industrial waste ponds in US do not have liners

Leaking undergraound storage tanks

Nitrates, fluoride, arsenic

Page 48: Presentation on water pollution

Case Study: Chesapeake BayCase Study: Chesapeake Bay

Largest US estuary

Largest US estuary

Relatively shallow Relatively shallow

Slow “flushing” action to Atlantic

Slow “flushing” action to Atlantic

Major problems with dissolved O2 Major problems with dissolved O2

Fig. 22-13 p. 506

Page 49: Presentation on water pollution

Ocean PollutionOcean Pollution

Fig. 22-11 p. 504

Page 50: Presentation on water pollution

Dumping wastes in the oceansDumping wastes in the oceans

• Dumping industrial wastes off US coasts has stopped, but dredge products are legally dumped at 110 sites in Atlantic, Pacific, and Gulf Coasts

• US has banned dumping sewage sludge in ocean since 1992

• 50 countries rep ~80% of world’s shipping fleet have agreed not to dump sewage and garbage

• London Dumping Convention of 1972; 1994

Page 51: Presentation on water pollution

Oil SpillsOil Spills Sources: offshore wells, tankers, pipelines and

storage tanks

Sources: offshore wells, tankers, pipelines and storage tanks

Effects: death of organisms, loss of animal insulation and buoyancy, smothering

Effects: death of organisms, loss of animal insulation and buoyancy, smothering

Significant economic impacts Significant economic impacts

Mechanical cleanup methods: skimmers and blotters

Mechanical cleanup methods: skimmers and blotters

Chemical cleanup methods: coagulants and dispersing agents

Chemical cleanup methods: coagulants and dispersing agents

Page 52: Presentation on water pollution

Oil Pollution in the OceansOil Pollution in the Oceans

• Oil Pollution Act of 1990

• Only about 15% of an oil spill can now be recovered

• Crude oil—3 years

• Refined oil– 10-20 years

Page 53: Presentation on water pollution

Exxon ValdezExxon Valdez

• 1989; contaminated about 1500 km of coastline; Prince William Sound

• $8 billion cost to Exxon

• 2006—17 years later, still toxic patches of oil along some parts of shoreline

• Still—largest source of oil pollution is runoff from land!

Page 54: Presentation on water pollution

Prevention Cleanup

Ban dumping of wastes and sewage by maritime and cruise ships in coastal waters

Reduce input of toxic pollutants

Separate sewage and storm lines

Regulate coastal development

Recycle used oil

Require double hulls for oil tankers

Require at least secondary treatment of coastal sewage

Use wetlands, solar-aquatic, orother methods to treat sewage

Sprinkle nanoparticles over an oil or sewage spill to dissolve the oil or sewage without creating harmful byproducts(still under development)

Protect sensitive areas from development, oil drilling, and oil shipping

Ban ocean dumping of sludge and hazardous dredged material

Improve oil-spill cleanup capabilities

SolutionsCoastal Water Pollution

Page 55: Presentation on water pollution

Reducing water pollutionReducing water pollution

• Non point source

• Septic tanks and sewers

Page 56: Presentation on water pollution

Reducing agriculturally produced pollutionReducing agriculturally produced pollution

• 2002: feed lot ruling

• Credit trading

• Agricultural: soil erosion, reforestation, cover crops, reduced fertilizers and pesticides, buffer zones

Page 57: Presentation on water pollution

Technological Approach: Septic SystemsTechnological Approach: Septic Systems

Require suitable soils and maintenanceRequire suitable soils and maintenance

Fig. 22-15 p. 510

Page 58: Presentation on water pollution

Sewage TreatmentSewage Treatment

Physical and biological treatmentPhysical and biological treatmentFig. 22-16 p. 511

Page 59: Presentation on water pollution

Advanced (Tertiary) Sewage TreatmentAdvanced (Tertiary) Sewage Treatment

Uses physical and chemical processesUses physical and chemical processes

Removes nitrate and phosphateRemoves nitrate and phosphate

ExpensiveExpensive

Not widely usedNot widely used

Page 60: Presentation on water pollution

Technological Approach: Using Wetlands to Treat SewageTechnological Approach: Using Wetlands to Treat Sewage

Fig. 22-18 p. 513

Page 61: Presentation on water pollution

Drinking Water QualityDrinking Water Quality

Safe Drinking Water Act Safe Drinking Water Act

Maximum contaminant levels (MCLs) Maximum contaminant levels (MCLs)

Purification of urban drinking water Purification of urban drinking water

Bottled water Bottled water

Protection from terrorism Protection from terrorism

Purification of rural drinking water Purification of rural drinking water

Page 62: Presentation on water pollution

Solutions

Water Pollution

•Prevent groundwater contamination

•Greatly reduce nonpoint runoff

•Reuse treated wastewater for irrigation

•Find substitutes for toxic pollutants

•Work with nature to treat sewage

•Practice four R's of resource use (refuse,

reduce, recycle, reuse)

•Reduce resource waste

•Reduce air pollution

•Reduce poverty

•Reduce birth rates

Page 63: Presentation on water pollution

WetlandsHome to ~33% of nation’s threatened and endangered species

Statistics— 50% loss since 1900 in US; cities on filled wetlands; rising sea level

Mitigation banking—Nat’l Academy: ~half of attempts to build a wetland fail.

More than 500 wetland restoration banks in US

Page 64: Presentation on water pollution

Virtues of WetlandsVirtues of Wetlands

• Home to wildlife and flora

• Flood protection

• Cycling and storage of chemical and biological substances

• Found at heads of rivers

• Remove toxins from sewage

Page 65: Presentation on water pollution

How Wetlands are DestroyedHow Wetlands are Destroyed

• Mostly by draining for development or farming

• To ‘reclaim’ land along coastlines

Page 66: Presentation on water pollution

Wetlands Protection

A federal permit is required to fill or to deposit dredged material into wetlands occupying more than 3 acres. (Cut average annual wetland loss by 80% between 1969 and 2002)

Continuing efforts to weaken wetlands protection

Using unscientific criteria to classify wetlands

Only about 6% of remaining inland wetlands are federally protected; laws are weak

Mitigation banking

Page 67: Presentation on water pollution

The EvergladesThe Everglades

• ~77,000 sq km; 3 sub-basins• Thin sheet of water 40-60 miles wide• Formed ~5000 yrs ago--how• Human influences:

late 1880’s—first dredging1907 and 1928: canals—saltwater; draining south of Lake O. 1961-1971: Kissimee River channelized

• 65% now drained• Plants and animals depend on water level timing—seriously

disturbed• Number of species of wading birds—dropped 95% since 1947

Page 68: Presentation on water pollution

Wetlands Protection LawsWetlands Protection Laws

• Clean Water Act of 1972: provisions, enforcement

• Food Security Acts of 1985 and 1990

• Wetland Reserve Program of 1990

• Jan 9, 2001 Supreme Court decision: Solid Waste Agency of Northern Cook County vs. US Army Corps of Engineers

• Oct 31, 2001 Army Corps of Engineers Regulation Guidance Letter

• January 15, 2002 --new NWP’s

• 2002, 2003, March, 2005—Clean Water Authority Restoration Act—in response to Supreme Ct. decision

Page 69: Presentation on water pollution

Protecting, Sustaining, and Restoring WetlandsProtecting, Sustaining, and Restoring Wetlands

Regulations Regulations

Mitigation bankingMitigation banking

Wetlands protectionWetlands protection

Wetlands restorationWetlands restoration

Control of invasive species

Control of invasive species

Page 70: Presentation on water pollution

Threats besides drainingThreats besides draining

• Millinery: Harriet L. Hemenway and Minna B. Hall—1896

• Fertilizers; sugar industry

• Non-native plants: melaleuca—from Australian—used by developers to drain wetlands.

Page 71: Presentation on water pollution

Everglades LegislationEverglades Legislation

• 1988: US Federal Lawsuit against Florida

• 1991: US and Florida action against growers

• 1994: Everglades Forever Act

• 2000: Passage of Everglades Restoration Investment Act

• 2003: Proposed amendments to 1994 and 2000 acts


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