it is non-point soulltion
the difference is that a point source pollution comes from a specific site & the non-point source pollution comes from many sources rather than a single specific site. or point source pollution is pollution that comes from a known and specific location. Nonpoint source pollution is pollution that does not have a specific point of orign....................:-)Hisme John
Two principal mechanisms for water pollution are point sources and nonpoint sources. Point sources are specific locations of industrial discharge, such as a pipe that dumps into a river. Nonpoint sources is pollution that does not originate from a single point. Urban runoff and agricultural pollution are nonpoint sources.
the difference is that a point source pollution comes from a specific site & the non-point source pollution comes from many sources rather than a single specific site. or point source pollution is pollution that comes from a known and specific location. Nonpoint source pollution is pollution that does not have a specific point of orign....................:-)Hisme John
If the only source of the gasoline is that one gas station, then it is point pollution. Nonpoint pollution sources can include leaking vehicles, but a large spill is more than likely from the gasoline station. .
Nonpoint-source pollution
An example of a nonpoint source of freshwater pollution is agricultural runoff. This occurs when rainwater washes fertilizers, pesticides, and sediments from fields into nearby rivers, lakes, and streams. Unlike point source pollution, which comes from a single, identifiable source, nonpoint source pollution is diffuse and arises from multiple, scattered sources, making it more challenging to manage and regulate.
Nonpoint source pollution is difficult to regulate, because its source is difficult to track.
Point source pollution is the term used to describe pollution that comes from a single identifiable source, such as a pipe or a smokestack.
False. Point source pollution is typically easier to track and clean up because it originates from a single, identifiable source, such as a pipe or discharge outlet. In contrast, nonpoint source pollution comes from multiple diffuse sources, making it more challenging to identify, monitor, and address. Effective management strategies can be implemented for point sources, while nonpoint sources often require broader land-use and watershed management approaches.
Nonpoint source pollution refers to contaminants that originate from multiple, diffuse sources, making it difficult to trace their origin, such as runoff from agricultural fields or urban areas. In contrast, point source pollution comes from a single, identifiable source, like a discharge pipe from a factory or wastewater treatment plant. While point source pollution is often easier to regulate and manage due to its specific origin, nonpoint source pollution poses greater challenges for monitoring and control due to its widespread and variable nature. Both types of pollution can significantly impact water quality and ecosystems, but their management strategies differ substantially.
Nonpoint source pollution generally results from land runoff, precipitation, atmospheric deposition, drainage, seepage or hydrologic modification. The term "nonpoint source" is defined to mean any source of water pollution that does not meet the legal definition of "point source" in section 502(14) of the Clean Water Act.
Point pollution is when the pollution happens right there, where the factory chimneys are, where the oil pipe breaks, or the oil tanker crashes, or the nuclear power plant explodes. The pollution is at the point where it happened.Non-point pollution is when the pollution happened somewhere else. Fumes escape from cars on the highway. The oil tanker crashed up there, but the pollution ran across the roads and landscape and into the ditch and into the waterways and into the ocean. The pollution ends up at the non-point where it happened.You can't say which is more dangerous, because it depends what the pollution is. A nuclear accident is usually more dangerous at point because the radiation weakens as it moves further away from the source. Oil pollution is damaging at point, but is more dangerous if the oil gets into the waterways and oceans where it can do a lot of damage. Pollution from a coal-burning power station is huge and constant.