Causes
The causes of water pollution can be divided into two groups: anthropogenic sources of pollution are those due to human choices, and natural sources are those resulting from forces intrinsic to the environment. Anthropogenic sources include:
- discharge of poorly-treated or untreated sewage;
- runoff from construction sites, farms, or paved and other impervious surfaces;
- discharge of contaminated and/or heated water used on industrial processes
- acid rain caused by industrial discharge of sulphur dioxide (by burning high-sulfur fossil fuels)
- seasonal turnover of lakes and embayments;
- siltation due to floods;
- eutrophication of lakes due to seasonal changes
- acid rain caused by natural volcanic discharges
- acid pollution of rivers and lakes by runoff from naturally acid soils
- carbon dioxide discharges and runoff, volcanic or mineral
Contaminants may include organic and inorganic substances. Organic water pollutants include:
- bacteria, as from sewage or livestock operations;
- food processing waste;
- tree and brush debris from logging operations
- metals;
- acid mine drainage;
- silt in stormwater runoff from cleared land
- acid rain caused by industrial or volcanic discharges
- acid pollution of lakes by runoff from acid soils
- carbon dioxide discharges and runoff, volcanic or mineral
Sources
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Homepage, http://www.epa.gov/ Kentucky Division of Water Homepage, http://water.ky.gov/ This article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by fixing it.