WHAT ARE SOME SOLUTIONS TO WATER POLUTION?

Home | Online Bookstore | How
Do I Meet Witches or Find a Coven? | Thirteen
Treasures Study Course
Welsh Resources | Celtic
Resources | Shaman Resources | Tantra Resources | Herbal
Resources
Articles, Notes, & Writings | Water Poution | Free Spritual Counseling & Healing | Search Engines
........In 1900, over 27,000 Americans died of typhoid fever, the most
virulent of water-borne diseases. In 1913, the addition of chlorine was heralded as a
major breakthrough in human health, and later a dash of fluoride was added to help curb
tooth decay. Now with a population increase of heart attacks, strokes, cancer, senility
and debilitating diseases on the rise, researchers have shown direct links to these
diseases and the carcinogenic trihalomethanes (THM's) created by chlorine reacting with
the organic matter in municipal water pumped through the taps of U.S. homes. Is there a
safer alternative to chlorine? Well there's ozone (O3), but less than 50 ozonation
facilities have been established in the U.S. In Europe, ozonation has been in use for
years, because chlorine is more expensive there than ozone. In Norway, about 30% of all
water is subjected to ultraviolet light sterilization methods. Since neither method
produces carcinogens, these are 2 healthier alternatives to the chlorination of water.
........Besides THM's, many cities have service lines entering
individual homes that are sometimes made of lead or have lead solder to join the pipes.
The corrosive action of water on the pipes can leach small amounts of lead into home
systems and cause serious health problems. Then there's the problem of chemical companies'
legal and illegal dumping, which sometimes washes down into rivers and lakes that feed
into city drinking water. In fact, EPA standards regarding the limitation of impurities in
safe drinking water is exceeded overall by nearly half of all major U.S. cities, and few
of these cities have made any corrective attempts to meet EPA standards. If more citizen
groups sued cities to comply with government standards, there might be more compliance
because of the notoriety of such public outcry.
........In rural areas, most people obtain their drinking water from
wells that for the most part goes untreated prior to consumption. Many people think that
groundwater is a series of lakes and streams flowing beneath the surface of the earth.
Actually most underground water exists in permeable saturated zones of rock, sand or
gravel called aquifers. Now it has been determined that many man-made chemicals have
leached their way through the soil to underground water systems. One 1985 Library of
Congress research report by Donald Feliciano stated that 38 states had found that
agricultural activity was the known source of groundwater contamination. All 38 states
reported nitrates (fertilizers), 24 reported bacteria (animal wastes), and 32 reported
pesticides and herbicides in tested groundwater.
........In November 1990, the EPA released the Phase I Report of the
National Survey of Pesticides in Drinking Water Wells. This was a 5-year, $12 million
project that sampled various wells across the country for 101 pesticides, 25 pesticide
degradates and nitrates. The results indicated that about 52% of the 94,600 wells in
community water systems in the U.S. contained nitrate, about 10% contained one or more
pesticides, and about 7% contained both. The survey also revealed that out of the
approximate 10.5 million rural domestic wells studied, 57% of them contained nitrates, 4%
contained one or more pesticides and about 3% contained both. In some areas of the
country, high nitrate levels have even caused brain damage in newborn infants.
........The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) was established in
1970 to presumably protect U.S. citizens from environmental pollution. What are American
taxpayers doing to give themselves good water in American cities? Many households have
reverted to bottled water, distillers, household purifying systems or their own well
water. Some have even installed 1500-gallon household recycling units that clean and
circulate the same water over and over via a computer controlled operation.
........Actually most of the U.S. gets its fresh water from surface
sources, like lakes, rivers or reservoirs, many of which are continually becoming more and
more polluted. Only 20% of current water supplies comes from under the ground, but studies
indicate that over 90% of the potential freshwater reserves available lie below the
surface of the ground! In 1980, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers inspected half of the
8,000 dams of the United States and found a third to be unsafe. So why are not ground
sources being tapped more for their rich supply? Transporting water from faraway lakes and
reservoirs is a lucrative arrangement for powerful groups of people, not to mention the
politics and banking institutions that play a major role in the financing of the dams and
water transport systems. Chlorinating this kind of water is also very profitable to
chemical industries. Naturally too, the more customers a municipality can tie to a
municipal water supply, the more fees the water commission can collect.
........Generally, the deeper the well, the more reliable it is as a
clean water source. If a well goes no deeper than 50 feet, it is considered shallow. A
deep or artesian well generally is drilled to between 100 and 200 feet below the surface,
although some well bores descend to more than 1,000 feet. Montana boasts the deepest water
well in the world, plunging 7,320 feet.
........In the early 50's, a geo-chemist, metallurgist, mining engineer
and dowser named Stephan Riess theorized that a vast supply of water ran under the Mojave
desert large enough to supply the needs of all the people in southern California. Riess's
conclusions were corroborated by a study done by civil engineers. Their findings revealed
that there was as Riess called it, primary water travelling in the deep rock fault system
under the desert that had nothing in common with the water in the alluvium sedimentary
aquifers. This rock fissure water was also so pure that chlorination was unnecessary, and
it ran like deep, life-giving veins in the earth. In fact, Riess contended that most
underground water did not originate via precipitation that had gradually percolated
through the soil as previously thought. Water is incompressible, so once it has reached a
depth where the density of the soil becomes equal to its own, it simply cannot
"seep" downward any further. He felt instead that the largest quantities of
water underground were formed from the elements within the earth, and constituted primary
water that had never seen the surface of the earth before. Freshwater springs that spew
forth large volumes of water off the coast of islands are good examples.
........As proof of his theory, Riess drilled a number of deep,
successful wells, and turned barren, California desert land into fertile, productive
acreage. A southern California magazine, Fortnight, ran a 2-part article in 1953, and
diagnosed why such a discovery was ignored by local politicians. There was simply too much
money to be made in the vast water transport systems planned that California's financial
and political leadership had to ignore Riess's discovery. Riess asked, "Why should
huge sums of money be spent to build pipe lines over great distances, when Mother Nature
has created her own pipe lines? It is certainly far more economical to pump water
vertically up 450 feet than to pump and transport it laterally for 450 miles!"
........By 1958, Riess's work was noticed by the Israeli government and
they invited him to find water for their new city of Eliat on the Red Sea's Gulf of
Aquaba. Riess met with the then Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion and his advisors who urged
him to go ahead with his search for water as soon as possible. On May 29, 1959, the
Jerusalem Post announced that the Riess-located well was sufficient enough to supply a
city of more than 100,000 people including industry and outlying villages!
........Although Bermuda traditionally relied upon roof top rainwater
catch-basins, in 1949 the island was hit by the worst drought in 4 decades. Even though
hydrologists declared that there was little underground fresh water available, dowser
Henry Gross map-dowsed from his home in Maine the general locations of 4 good freshwater
sources in Bermuda. Already existent wells had provided little palatable water, being
mostly salty or brackish in content. When Gross was summoned to Bermuda, he accurately
pinpointed his 4 locations which in turn were drilled for water. They were completed in
1950, wherein the 4 wells were able to produce 2 million gallons of fresh water per day
for public consumption.
........Are these just isolated examples? Of course not, as Donald
Bingham (a U.S. Geological Survey hydrologist) pointed out in an April, 1974 Popular
Science article, there is a vast underground water system available in almost all parts of
the country lying untapped.
........Some other alternatives to the water pollution problem have
involved purifying water with magnetic or vortexian energy devices, installation of solar
water distillers, and even towing icebergs from Antarctica! Even before 1900, small
icebergs were towed to Lima (Callao), Peru. In the late 1950's, Scripps Institution
oceanographer John Isaacs proposed the possibility of bringing Antarctic icebergs to Los
Angeles. His plan involved having 3 tugboats maneuver a 10-mile long, half-mile wide
iceberg to the southern California coast in about one year's time.
........The National Science Foundation awarded Dr. John Hult and Neill
Ostrander of the Rand Corporation $50,000 in 1972 for their feasibility study entitled,
"Antarctic Icebergs as a Global Fresh Water Resource." The determined cost to
tow fresh water icebergs from Antarctica to California was less than 20% of the present
cost being spent on the same quantity of fresh water. Unlike irregularly shaped Arctic
icebergs, Antarctic icebergs are tabularly shaped and larger. A regularly shaped tabular
iceberg is also more easily towable too, because it is longer than it is wide. Five or six
tug boats with a tractive force of 125 tons each could theoretically shift an iceberg of
100 million tons through the water to any California destination. Melted water would then
be pumped by pipeline to the coast.
........Since southern California's water problem is worsening every year, why have no icebergs loomed on the horizon? The Los Angeles' Metropolitan Water District (MWD) estimates that the daily demand of 3.5 billion gallons of water will outstrip the supply by year 2000. Instead of the cheaper iceberg alternative though, MWD is swerving toward the construction of expensive desalination plants, possibly even nuclear powered! That makes a lot more sense in an earthquake-prone area!?
........Another interesting invention that has never been implemented on a large scale was
designed in 1931 by M. Achille Knapen. He succeeded in condensing and extracting water
from warm air to irrigate fields and vineyards in southern France with what he called, an
"air well" (See U.S. patent no. 1,816,592). Looking like a 40-foot concrete
beehive, it was possible to produce as much as 6,000 gallons of water daily for every
1,000 square feet of condensing surface. An airwell can be built on practically any scale,
and the wall materials can be concrete blocks, bricks or concentric hollow shells filled
with sand or earth. A small airwell 12 feet high and 12 feet across with walls 2 feet
thick can supply a generous output of daily water. It can be fitted with top and bottom
air pipes, and a multitude of condensing plates on the inside. Warm air circulates and
gives up moisture on the cool inside condensing plates angled downward toward a catch
basin at the bottom were it is collected. Using scrap and local materials, makeshift air
wells could help solve many water problems in drought ridden areas of the world,
especially in Third World countries.
.........What are some creative solutions to water pollution in the
world? How about water dowsing? In the early 50's, a water dowsing dowser
named Stephan Riess theorized that a vast supply of w ater ran under the Mojave desert
large enough to supply the needs of all the people in southern California. Findings
revealed that there was as Riess called it, primary water travelling in the deep rock
fault system under the desert that had nothing in common with the water in the alluvium
sedimentary aquifers. Water dowsing: water dowsing Is A Creative Alternative.
........The above subject is just one of the many creative alternatives
mentioned in the new manual, Creative
Alternatives For A Changing World offered by: Creative Alternatives, 1463 Berger
St., Odenton, MD 21113 USA
Click Here To Order Creative Alternatives
or Email: |
| The 100% Brain Course Home Page |
Explore Creative Alternatives & World Problems |
Future Creative Alternatives Center In Ecuador
Unusual and Interesting Links
Mind and Brain Development Links
The 100% Brain Course Teacher's Workshop
Other Pages On The Creative Alternatives Website:
For Further Information contact us
Click Here to return to the main page

There have been visitors to this page since January 1, 2005
| Author: staff Copyright © 1977, 1992, 2003 by Church of Dynion Mwyn. All rights reserved. Revised: 26 Jun 2008 14:31:23 -0400 |
|
This Site Created by Camelot Press for Celtic Church of Dynion Mwyn, Inc. For information on all individuals and organizations listed in this website, or the name of a contact person in your area that can give you further information on the Celtic Church of Dynion Mwyn, Let us hear from you! You may also call us at 000-000-0000 If you access our voice mail, we will call you back collect if long distance. Or, you can write Dynion Mwyn, P.O. Box 672125, Marietta, GA 30006-0036 |