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Once the contaminants touch the ground they seep into the groundwater table, after this they are distributed into groundwater wells and aquifers.
Petroleum
The word 'seep' is both a verb and a noun.The noun 'seep' is a word for a place where liquid from the ground has oozed to the surface.The noun forms of the verb to seep are seepage and the gerund, seeping.Example: The seepage from the mine has polluted the stream.
it will give you a head ache and get you high if you inhale right by the leak, but it wont seep through your vents and make you sleepy
In areas of steep slopes, the ground is slanted as simple as that. as such, when there's runoff water the water doesn't seep through the ground but rather flows along the ground at a certain speed which doesn't give it sufficient time to seep through the ground.. this doesn't mean it doesn't seep through at all because it does but it's doesn't drain deep into the ground as expected on flat grounds..
Chimicles like cleaning supplies and other toxins can seep into the ground and make the water unstable
groundwater is used faster than it is replaced
hydrostatic force and capillary action
Once the contaminants touch the ground they seep into the groundwater table, after this they are distributed into groundwater wells and aquifers.
Yes, but it's a very slow process.
Petroleum
The answer is seep
Any foreign substance that can enter an organism by diffusion can seep into an organism and replace its hard parts.
Chemicals and waste caused by land pollution seep into the ground. A high amount of our water supply comes from underground. as the chemicals and waste make their way down, they pollute the precious groundwater, lessening the amount of usable water available.
The seep into the ground (polluting aquifers that we use for drinking water) and to the surface and cause widespread environmental damage (harm to life on Earth).
yes it does
You have a high groundwater table. Most likely it is always higher than average and the spring thaw and rains just made the situation more obvious.