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Water
Facts
Man's very existence depends on water. Water is the major
basic commodity of our lives, it sustains all life and is
crucial to our existence. Roughly 2/3 of our planet is water
but less than 1% is drinking water, found in our freshwater
lakes, streams and wells. Nature has its own method of
purifying water called the Hydrologic Cycle, but "water is
best as nature provides it," is a common misconception.
Practically all natural water needs refinement or treatment
to make it safe to drink or more satisfactory to use.
Water Contaminants |
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Contaminants pour into our water resources at a rate
of 500,000 tons per day. The earth's water supply
cycle starts in the upper cloud layers. As it falls
to the earth as rain or snow, it picks up impurities
and gases from the atmosphere. Landing on earth, it
seeps over and through the ground, dissolving earth
minerals. Passing through limestone, it dissolves
calcium and magnesium, the hardness minerals. Iron
deposits impart iron to the water. Acidity and
sediments are other water issues.
Municipal water supplies come from surface
reservoirs, such as lakes and rivers, or from
underground reservoirs. Usually, municipalities
chlorinate the water to make it safe to drink.
Sediment is removed by filtration. Tastes and odors
are reduced or eliminated. The water is conditioned
to comply with certain specifications. However,
hardness minerals, tastes and odors are not always
reduced to the most desirable levels.
Underground reservoirs provide our private water
supplies. Because the water is raw and untreated, it
can have varying amounts of hardness, iron, tastes,
odors, acidity, or combinations of these. Different
localities and water levels affect mineral content.
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The Hydrologic Cycle
The hydrologic cycle is the earth's natural method of
cleansing water. The earth, sun and atmosphere all work
together imitating a distiller. It is the largest water
purification system known to man. In this cleaning process,
surface water evaporates from streams, lakes, etc. and rises
to the sky in the form of vapor. The vapor condenses into
clouds.
When the condensation in the clouds are heavy enough, it
falls to earth as rain, snow etc. About 70% of the water
will evaporate again. The remaining 30% will replenish
surface water. Throughout the hydrologic cycle, water
changes from pure to impure and back to pure again.

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Evaporation
Surface water is heated by sunlight and evaporates into
vapor that ascends into the atmosphere. This is the
purest naturally occurring water.
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Condensation
When water vapor condenses in the atmosphere, it forms a
cloud. The cloud becomes increasingly 'dirtier' by
picking up impurities - usually in the form of dissolved
gases. This atmospheric water is acidic and aggressive.
'Acidic' water tends to dissolve virtually all minerals
it comes in contact with.
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Precipitation
The acidic water returns to earth as precipitation
(rain, snow, sleet, etc.).
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Infiltration
The water picks up sediment and dissolved minerals as it
seeps through the soil becoming hard, brackish and
contaminated to varying degrees.
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Evaporation
The water eventually heats again and the cycle repeats.
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