Yes. Humans have the capacity to pollute water with no difficulty. They most certainly can and do. Take the Chesapeake Bay for example. Yup. Most pollution comes from humans
Pollution of water in Subic bay is mainly caused by poor wastage disposal. Sewerage and other toxic wastes are allowed to make their way into the water.
Bacterial
Yes, there is salt water intrusion in the Tampa Bay Area. The salt water intrusion is from droughts.
a bay is an area close/or near the water example go sit down by the bay
The major pollutants impacting the Chesapeake Bay include nutrient pollution (excess nitrogen and phosphorus), sedimentation, and chemical contaminants. These pollutants come from various sources such as agriculture runoff, urban stormwater, and wastewater treatment plants, leading to water quality degradation, algal blooms, and reduced oxygen levels in the bay.
bay
A bay is a large body of water connected to one of the oceans or a sea. They are formed like a inlet of water where the land blocks most of the waves and so it is semi still pond like area.
The best place to locate a graph showing pollution in the Chesapeake Bay is the internet. Most city sites have diagrams with this information. To learn more about the consistency of pollution levels, the Almanac may be resourceful.
A bay is a body of water that forms an indentation along the shoreline. It can also mean a recessed area that is enclosed. The sun reflected off the water in the bay.
Much of the Bay Area gets its water from Hech Hetch reservoir in the Sierra Nevada, near Yosemite National Park, and from the Delta. Three very large pipes convey water to the East Bay and Bay Ara. Google Mokelumne Aqueduct for more information on this complicated system of water delivery.
A Bay is created when water from the ocean is in constant motion moving sand and rocks against a specific area, then it will turn into a Bay