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California State Water Resources Control Board swrcb/

California State Water Resources Control Board http://www.swrcb.ca.gov/. Typical Water Chemistry. A part per million may be hard to comprehend or visualize. Want to see how much it is? It’s a credit card lying in the middle of a football field.

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California State Water Resources Control Board swrcb/

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  1. California State Water Resources Control Boardhttp://www.swrcb.ca.gov/

  2. TypicalWaterChemistry

  3. A part per million may be hard to comprehend or visualize. Want to see how much it is? It’s a credit card lying in the middle of a football field.

  4. Want to see what taking in a milligram per kilogram (1 ppm) of your body weight amounts to? It’s the equivalent of 726 people, each weighing 150 pounds, sharing a chocolate bar (~50 grams).

  5. California Water Service Company 2006 Water Quality Report

  6. Pollution sources Shallow groundwater is most at risk

  7. Unsaturated zone Fig. 19.07 a Water table Water held in the unsaturated zone is immobile. When it reaches the water table, it can MOVE—carrying contaminants along with it!

  8. Fig. 19.09 W. W. Norton Shallow groundwater is more susceptible to pollution. Impermeable layers may protect deeper aquifer if they are continuous.

  9. Fig. 19.25 b W. W. Norton

  10. Fig. 19.25 c W. W. Norton Plume will move perpendicular to contour lines on your “topographic map” Of the water table!!!! (Unless it’s fractured bedrock!)

  11. LNAPL—Light Non-Aqueous Phase Liquids—float on water table

  12. DNAPL—Dense Non-Aqueous Phase Liquids—sink through groundwater

  13. Halogenated Organics

  14. Metals The alchemy of contamination. Chromium in the soil of this New Jersey industrial parking lot has dissolved in a pool of standing water. Because chromium can go into solution and move through soil, chromium pools and blooms (the crystallized chromium left on the surface when the water evaporates) may occur some distance from the original site of contamination.

  15. Metals (like Mercury) and organic chemicals (like PCB’s) are showing up in fish

  16. Nitrates • About 10 percent of active California public • water-supply wells have nitrate contamination • exceeding the drinking water standard of • 45 parts per million. In agricultural areas, such • as Stanislaus County, up to 80 percent of • groundwater is affected or polluted by nitrate. • (b) The map shows the extent of nitrate • contamination throughout the state.

  17. Occurrence of Arsenic in Groundwater in California From ACWA Arsenic Study, 2000

  18. Ugandans collecting drinking water

  19. Notice rain water collection system Water with very high counts of E. coli and other deadly bacteria is purified in a few short hours by proper placement in readily available plastic bottles which are left in the sun. Children and caregivers are trained through schools and church teaching programs to use the system, being encouraged and held accountable by trained staff. Case study results have been dramatic. Participating families in our target areas have experienced up to 80% reductions in water borne diseases.

  20. Pharmaceuticals

  21. Point Source

  22. Total Maximum Daily Loads (TMDL’s): A TMDL requires that all sources of pollution and all aspects of a watershed's drainage system be reviewed, not just the pollution coming from discrete conveyances (known as point sources), such as a discharge pipe from a factory or a sewage treatment plant.

  23. Much emphasis in the war on NPS pollutants is placed upon education of the public.

  24. RCRA seeks to stop illegal dumping of waste by providing a means of tracking the waste from “cradle to grave”

  25. California Water Service Company 2006 Water Quality Report

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