Contaminate groundwater today, drink those contaminates tomorrow.
Contaminating groundwater is dumb.
Keep groundwater clean - for life.
contamination of groundwater
Earthquakes
groundwater
a spill into a drain at a factory
groundwater is water found below the ground. In many countries such as the UK, Nambia and Bangladesh, groundwater is a major water source for the population. Contamination of groundwater then, is the pollution of this water which often has major ramifications for a population. Major contaminants are nitrogenous fertilizers, and heavy metals found in the soil or rocks. Chalk and even certain types of plants have been used to combat groundwater contamination. Water hyacinth, for example, a plant found in Bangladesh was used to decrease the amounts of arsenic found in the groundwater in that country.
One can tell if one has groundwater contamination if rain water or surface water comes into contact with contaminated soil while seeping into the ground or when liquid hazardous substances themselves soak down through the soil or rock into the groundwater.
Groundwater is as prone to contamination as surface water. Groundwater contamination results from the infiltration of spills at the surface, leachate from tanks. pipelines and buried waste. Groundwater may also be contaminated by naturally occurring salts, metals, organics and gases in the soil.
Menure and other mixed chemicals from wildlife,plantation etc.
These liners prevent the contamination of groundwater
Chester David Rail has written: 'Groundwater contamination' -- subject- s -: Computer network resources, Groundwater, Management, Pollution, Purification, Quality, Underground Water
Thomas J. Aley has written: 'Groundwater contamination and sinkhole collapse induced by leaky impoundments in soluble rock terrain' -- subject(s): Groundwater, Pollution, Seepage, Sinkholes
Sometimes referred to as groundwater contamination, groundwater pollution is not as easily classified as surface water pollution, as contamination may not be easy to recognise. Groundwater, by it's very nature, is more susceptable to contamination from sources that may not directly affect surface water bodies. Groundwater can become contaminated by those drilling for oil or gas wells. Groundwater may be polluted through a spill or ongoing realease of chemical or radionuclide contaminents into soil, polluting the aquifer below yet not the surface water body above. This is defined as a toxin plume, and as it travels it is defined as a plume front. Analysis of groundwater pollution usually focuses on the soil characteristics, geology, hydrogeology, hydrolgy and the nature of the contaminants at the site.