troll
water filtration plant
the sewers take sewage and surface water runoff (from the roads etc) to a sewage treatment plant. Here it is treated and cleaned then discharged back in to a river or stream. From that river a water treatment works then abstracts (removes) water, treats it drinking water standard and it is pumped through the water pipes to your tap.
so that they can put the cleaned water back into the stream
its called a water sewage treatment plant.
Paul Hansen has written: 'Increasing the efficiency of small water works and sewage treatment plants' -- subject(s): Purification, Water, Sewage disposal, Sewage
If you do not have mains sewage it will go into a local septic tank on the property or near by. Where it will be treated an then discharged into a soak away. If you have mains sewage then it goes into the sewer pipes and can either flow out into a river or the sea, or more likely it will go to a sewage treatment works where it will be treated and cleaned. From there it can either be discharged into a river or sea or it might be treated and recycled.
The smell of sewage in your hot water may be due to bacteria growing in your water heater. This can happen if the water heater temperature is set too low or if there is a buildup of sediment in the tank. It is important to have your water heater inspected and cleaned to address this issue.
bacteria and dirty toilet paper the bacteria gets filtered and cleaned to make sure there is no harmful bacteria in the water and the toilet paper dissolves on its way to the sewage water treatment facility
Faeces is filtered from the sewage water and the water is cleaned and passed back through the domestic water cycle. The solid waste is disposed of in a form of land fill
The First Step of seperating sewage is called Screening! Screening: the water flows through a grate to remove large solid objects from the water. The debris that gets caught on the grate is cleaned off at regular intervals.
The activated sludge process is commonly used to treat sewage. In this process, microorganisms are added to break down organic matter in the sewage, forming a sludge that settles out, leaving cleaner water behind. The cleaned water is then further treated before being discharged.
That depends on how your sewage is treated, it could go into a septic tank in your garden or it could go into the public sewer and on to a sewage treatment works (sewage farm). In both cases raw sewage is prevented from discharge directly into the environment and the sewage is retained until natural processes have converted it into water that is safe to discharge.