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1.1: Classifications of Contaminants

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    38878
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    According to the Safe Drinking Water Act, a contaminant is any physical, chemical, biological, or radiological substance in water. While some contaminants are harmless, others are deadly. Contaminants can even mix with water molecules in the atmosphere. Technically, any compound that is not a water molecule is a contaminant when it comes to water.

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    Pin It! Misconception Alert

    Many people think that all contaminants are manmade. They are not! Some have natural sources in the soil, such as arsenic and uranium. These can be expensive to remove because they occur naturally in the rocks around the water source.

    Water can be contaminated by various human-caused (anthropogenic) activities or by existing natural features (natural contaminants) like mineral-rich geologic formations. It is not uncommon to find naturally occurring fluoride or arsenic in water.

    Agricultural activities, industrial operations, landfills, animal operations, and small and large scale sewage treatment processes, among many other things, all can potentially contribute to contamination. As water runs over the land or infiltrates into the soil and groundwater, it dissolves material left behind by these potential contaminant sources.

    There are three major groups of contamination: inorganic chemicals, organic chemicals, and biological agents. The risks and type of remediation for a contaminant depend on the type of chemicals present.

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    Pin It! Misconception Alert

    People use the words contaminants and pollutants interchangeably. What is the difference between a contaminant and a pollutant?

    • A contaminant is a substance that is not normally expected.
    • A pollutant is a substance found at a concentration that has reached a level that adversely affects the suitability of the water for its intended purpose.

    1.1: Classifications of Contaminants is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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