And still other from the Texas National Guard are tasked with purifying drinking water. |
|
Access to clean drinking water and adequate sanitation, especially in the rural countryside, is limited. |
|
Food habit, clean drinking water and proper sanitation hold the key to preserving the health of the people. |
|
Most epidemics are caused by lack of proper sanitation and safe drinking water. |
|
Many communities still suffer from lack of clean drinking water and sanitation. |
|
With little access to clean drinking water and sanitation, the inhabitants face a constant threat of disease. |
|
At this point, the lack of clean drinking water and sanitation is the main threat. |
|
Access to clean drinking water and sanitation alone would save nearly two million lives each year and prevent half a billion diseases annually. |
|
Risk of infection is present anywhere where food is prepared unhygienically or drinking water is inadequately treated. |
|
The Government schemes to provide pure drinking water has not benefited the people living in the remote villages. |
|
Getting into the habit of drinking water, lots of water, every day is important. |
|
The saving grace is that the Zoo's drinking water comes from the piped water supply. |
|
Reverse osmosis is best known for its use in desalination, the process of turning sea water into drinking water. |
|
That's where nearly all of Galway city and county gets their drinking water and if that gets polluted, we're banjaxed. |
|
I searched far and wide but could not find a single drop of water, not even boiled drinking water. |
|
This could include a bun, an egg, five matchsticks, a candle, and half a bottle of drinking water, some tea and some sugar. |
|
In addition, there will be a huge programme to further improve the quality of drinking water, river and seawater. |
|
How can a beneficiary group in need of drinking water be forced to contribute a share of the cost of water supply? |
|
More than 70 percent of our nation's drinking water is medicated to treat the teeth, according to figures released by the U.S. Census Bureau. |
|
They found that inclusion of mannose in the drinking water of chicks reduced S. typhimurium colonization of the cecum. |
|
|
One increasingly popular approach is to use desalinated water to supplement regular drinking water. |
|
As many people used river water as their source of drinking water, the disease spread with ease. |
|
New regulations that come into force at the beginning of 2004 will bring even tougher standards for drinking water quality. |
|
The ice cubes can then be drained into glasses for drinking water as they melt. |
|
The Prime Minister said upgrading the railway system and extending drinking water to villages are top-priority projects. |
|
The survey of the area revealed sewage contamination of the drinking water supply. |
|
At night, the utility secretly opened hydrants and poured precious drinking water into the sewers to flush the pipes. |
|
The mystery was solved in 1939 when fluoride was identified as a trace element in local drinking water. |
|
Unlike some resorts in other parts of the world, drinking water and hot beverages are free. |
|
The Bulgarian government responded by sending 11 tanks of drinking water and a truck carrying bottles of mineral water to help the town. |
|
They are living under deplorable conditions with limited access to safe drinking water, proper sanitation and food. |
|
I took a travel kettle and travel plug to boil water with me in Malta as well as drinking water from bottles. |
|
This could be the cheapest and most dependable source of drinking water for the people of Titilagarh. |
|
She dealt with generator problems, which provided her daily supply of fresh drinking water. |
|
Ethiopia faces devastating famine, millions in other parts of the world have no drinking water and global warming is forgotten or denied. |
|
The region's health officials now require lower levels of turbidity in drinking water. |
|
After filling the drinking water, I had to wash utensils, wash two buckets of clothes, sweep and mop the entire house. |
|
Without any surface water, drinking water had to be carted from wells sunk on the beach. |
|
The rainy seasons have been disastrous, to the point where there are serious shortages of drinking water. |
|
The soil was too sandy to grow food, an urgent need, and poor quality drinking water had to be drained into barrels sunk beneath the ground. |
|
|
Wells provided the villagers with clean drinking water, rather than the chocolate-coloured muck I had been swimming in. |
|
Thousands of sheep are grazing yards from unfenced reservoirs supplying half a million Scots with drinking water. |
|
Overlaid on this general picture is the pattern of special commercially available drinking water. |
|
Women and children have to walk up to half a mile to draw drinking water from a water source. |
|
It will undertake projects to provide proper drinking water, waste disposal and sanitation facilities for pilgrims. |
|
In an age of murky drinking water, carefully made white wine was valued for its clarity. |
|
It also admitted that a drinking water fountain had been pumping out untreated industrial water for nine months. |
|
It's pretty rough, but as long as you stick to soft drinks and avoid the drinking water, you should be fine. |
|
Many people were put off their breakfasts on Friday morning by radio news bulletins about human and animal excrement in our drinking water. |
|
We offered to supply her with bottles of drinking water if she was still not happy using water from the tap. |
|
Nitrates are extremely soluble in water and can move easily through soil into the drinking water supply. |
|
Some cleaning products, pesticides, solvents and lead in drinking water from old pipes can be dangerous to your baby. |
|
Chief Madzimawi of the Ngoni people in Chipata has appealed to the New Deal Government to provide clean and safe drinking water in his chiefdom. |
|
Aftershocks, rain and landslides are hampering aid efforts and souring drinking water, but survivors want more from authorities. |
|
In the space of a few months the price of drinking water had risen by two and a half times. |
|
They erected such corrals at intervals of approximately six-hour marches, always near drinking water, pasture and brushwood for the fire. |
|
Tests to determine the presence of lead in drinking water should be done by a laboratory certified specifically for lead testing. |
|
Four teenage army cadets at an adventure camp were rushed to hospital after it is believed drinking water was spiked. |
|
The iron standpipe supplied residents of Rawcliffe with drinking water before the handful of cottages tapped into the mains. |
|
Every week, Christopher washes his clothes and collects drinking water at a standpipe in Beetham Gardens. |
|
|
He moves among the students in the encampment checking canteens, to see who has been drinking water. |
|
There is no drinking water because wells and water supplies have been flooded by seawater. |
|
Given the state of their drinking water, anything that offered a little sterilisation could add a few years to a person's life. |
|
If ice does exist there, it could be harvested and used for drinking water or broken down into hydrogen and oxygen. |
|
In Cleveland, the power is on, but residents are asked to boil their drinking water. |
|
Toilets and drinking water tanks will be installed at convenient locations. |
|
There is no laboratory for science practicals, class rooms are less in number, there are few teachers and no drinking water. |
|
The survey also measured levels of air pollution, quality and quantity of drinking water and sewage. |
|
The long-term health risks of placing fluoride into drinking water at source is to be raised at tomorrow's meeting of Kerry county council. |
|
They buy bottled water if they fear that their drinking water is polluted, and they apply sunscreen to protect their skin from UV radiation. |
|
Many large municipal drinking water supplies are fluoridated to an optimal level of 1 part per million. |
|
The old days of a beer keg on the coach on the way home have been replaced with trips back drinking water and eating pasta. |
|
There is no scheme in all these projects to solve the paucity of clean, safe drinking water. |
|
He eked out his drinking water until Tuesday morning, waiting in the faint hope of being found. |
|
But the government has said nothing about committing additional funds or resources to the monitoring of their drinking water. |
|
It is possible to get drinking water supplies tested to make sure they comply with EC standards. |
|
Ingestion of drinking water containing arsenic can cause adverse health effects. |
|
Every day, each person was given a bowl of congee and a glass of drinking water, and once a week, each was allowed a three minute shower. |
|
It is more normally used to filtrate drinking water and in small amounts is not harmful. |
|
An approved laboratory might not be approved to test for all potential drinking water contaminants. |
|
|
The mayor's projects to improve the purification of drinking water in the metropolitan area were given a nod of approval at the meeting. |
|
Biocides are used in a variety of products ranging from cosmetics to paints, and from drinking water to swimming pools. |
|
In 1996, 25 of 26 councils in Northern Ireland voted against fluoridating their drinking water. |
|
In an exclusive e-mail interview, Dr. Arvid Carlsson of Sweden argues that fluoridating the drinking water should be stopped. |
|
Dr. C. Danielson, in the Journal of American Medical Association, attributed many hip fractures in Utah to fluoridated drinking water. |
|
The chemist asked what kind of fluoride was being used to fluoridate the drinking water. |
|
Yet reports in the British Medical Journal found that long-term exposure to fluoridated drinking water does not increase the risk of fracture. |
|
Imagine, we use two gallons of quality drinking water every time we flush the toilet. |
|
The potable nature of available drinking water is affected as the sweet water aquifers are destroyed by quarrying. |
|
Sneakers are a good choice of footwear and walk with lots of drinking water! |
|
Residents in states where fracking has been practised for years have charged that gas production has contaminated air and drinking water. |
|
He directed the officials to complete the construction of culverts and link roads and ensure the proper drinking water supply. |
|
Fresh drinking water, oystershell grit, and cuttlebone were available ad libitum. |
|
However, make sure a sufficient amount of cool, clean, fresh drinking water is always available. |
|
It was also used for watering the flowers in the churchyard, and for drinking water. |
|
Californians face waterborne illnesses lurking in the surf from urban runoff, and towns have lost their drinking water due to contamination. |
|
Regulations set achievable levels of drinking water quality to protect health. |
|
This has helped in solving the problem of drinking water, bringing some lands under rabi crops and generating employment opportunities. |
|
All reasonable people understand that acts of God, accidents, or incidents will happen that will affect the quality of drinking water. |
|
Results also show that 90 percent of those who participated in the study use their wells for drinking water. |
|
|
Most drinking water comes from municipal reservoirs, but people in isolated areas get their drinking water from wells. |
|
Filtering drinking water to remove toxic copper, lead, pesticides, chloride and additives is also recommended. |
|
Also, remember that it is better to drink dirty water than to go without drinking water all. |
|
Xiamen is fully ready to provide drinking water to Jinmen, Taiwan Province, which is now suffering drought. |
|
Cholera, typhoid, dysentery, and other illnesses can be contracted from untreated bathing and drinking water. |
|
Large, intact portions of the Cienega Corridor allow for rain and snowmelt to enter the ground and recharge our drinking water reservoirs. |
|
His drinking water comes from a nearby water tower by means of a simple pipe, and his foul waste drops into the Thames itself. |
|
More than 1.5 million litres of fresh drinking water were delivered to the local population. |
|
I offer pain medication and antibiotics, but it's a temporary fix because their drinking water will simply reinfect them. |
|
We have a stock of drinking water, washing water, a box of tinned food, biscuits, crisps, chocolates, we certainly won't go hungry. |
|
Basic amenities including toilet facilities and drinking water would be provided. |
|
At particular risk are aquifers, underground repositories of water that are tapped by wells for agricultural irrigation and drinking water. |
|
It shows how to cultivate vegetables in poor soil and produce drinking water from sea water. |
|
Lead is found in lead-based paint, contaminated soil, household dust, drinking water, lead crystal, and lead-glazed pottery. |
|
Some experts believe the toxins in our drinking water are the number one health threat causing cancer, heart disease and lead poisoning. |
|
There are also leats for water meadows, tin works, farm and cottage drinking water supplies. |
|
So, better sanitation, safe drinking water and general health awareness are the important points being stressed by the hospital. |
|
For those who want to produce their own pure drinking water, passive-solar distillation is an inexpensive, low-tech option. |
|
Water can be obtained from streams, rivers, lakes, or underground aquifers, which are used to supply private wells and public drinking water. |
|
Potatoes rotted in the hold and drinking water grew thick and poured like oil. |
|
|
The new package will include 2100 litres of mould disinfectants and 8000 litres of drinking water disinfectants, worth a total of 17 000 euro. |
|
Your article on arsenic poisoning of drinking water in Bangladesh and India clearly illustrated a terrible disaster for many millions of people. |
|
He partly ascribed the problems to a shortage of skills at municipal level in treating drinking water and waste water. |
|
But I wonder how many readers know or care about the demise of free drinking water in many of our schools. |
|
Reservoirs are running dry, unable to meet demands for drinking water and crop irrigation. |
|
Much of the city was still without electricity, gas and drinking water last night with food supplies running low. |
|
The book highlights useful association of HPC and presence of coliform count in drinking water and indepth analysis of the two tests. |
|
Behind the locomotive is a reefer to supply ice for drinking water in the sleepers. |
|
Salt water edged into the aquifer, tainting the drinking water of the burgeoning urban areas. |
|
The land is on a sand and gravel aquifer, several hundred metres from a reservoir that supplies drinking water to 650,000 homes in Dublin. |
|
Have the effects on our groundwater and drinking water systems been considered? |
|
Calcium and magnesium are among the most abundant elements on earth, so they are imbibed as drinking water and as milk. |
|
Final concentrations of these toxicants met World Health Organization guidelines for safe drinking water, Allgood notes. |
|
The Iraqi Ministry of Water and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers have combined forces to bring sanitary drinking water to the people of Fallujah. |
|
Today, a billion people do not have adequate supplies of drinking water and two billion have no sanitary facilities. |
|
Added to drinking water at concentrations of around one part per million, fluoride ions stick to dental plaque. |
|
High levels of nitrate in drinking water, which can be due to agricultural runoff, have been implicated in human health problems, such as blue baby syndrome. |
|
Supplies included cup ramen, bean sprouts, paper diapers, tea and drinking water. |
|
They included a large number of food items and medicine such as milk powder, drinking water, sugar, rice, flour, dhal, tea, onions, potatoes, canned fish, and soap. |
|
The community of 35 currently get their drinking water supply from a borehole next to the pier, but over the past few years the system has been prone to equipment failure. |
|
|
We added the chemical to the drinking water during the pretreatment period to prevent the spread of coccidia, a common endoparasite of house finches. |
|
Improvements in wastewater management are inextricably linked with the desperate need to provide safe drinking water to those currently unserved or underserved. |
|
That can happen, according to the report, when methane leaks out of fracking wells and into drinking water. |
|
There was no drinking water, and people collapsed from heat stroke. |
|
The troops, already debilitated by the impure drinking water and hunger on the long, hot march from Batesville, were quickly overcome with malaria, as had been predicted. |
|
Occasionally, a pregnant woman is exposed to significant amounts of lead in her drinking water if her home has lead pipes, lead solder on copper pipes or brass faucets. |
|
But what if the upstream community wants to use the water to bathe and wash clothes, and the result will be a shortage of drinking water for the downstream community? |
|
Ultrafiltration membranes remove more than 99 percent of bacteria, molds, and spores from drinking water, and can be used at home. |
|
They also have access to the statistics showing the exact time spent away from the phone, such as toilet breaks or getting drinking water from the water cooler. |
|
There is the cost of cleaning chemical pollution from our drinking water. |
|
Diseases from insanitary drinking water killed thousands each year. |
|
If your water supply runs low, do not ration drinking water. |
|
They are fair arguments, I guess, but not when you put it up against accusations of toxic drinking water causing weird cancers. |
|
Nearly 6,000 hand pumps were sunk to provide drinking water. |
|
Coffee can also dehydrate you, so counter its effects by drinking water. |
|
Groundwater will be polluted, which would contaminate drinking water. |
|
The amount of arsenic consumed in drinking water by control individuals, and the amount they excreted in urine, were so low as to be undetectable by spectrophotometry. |
|
Non-medicated saline sprays or pure drinking water are more effective than decongestant sprays, which can damage the nasal lining if used regularly. |
|
Much of this ground water recharges into streams which eventually empty into the Mississippi River, a major source of drinking water for the Twin Cities metro area. |
|
Residents of Woburn may also have been exposed to polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons as well as to arsenic and chromium compounds in their drinking water. |
|
|
It thus falls to IS to provide drinking water and irrigation to massive areas of farmland. |
|
The production of haloforms in drinking water as a result of the reaction between organic carbon compounds and hypochlorous acid is a serious drinking water quality issue. |
|
At the same time, the waters of the mighty river spill into sewers and drainage ditches and carry their untreated broth to wells used for drinking water. |
|
The billionaire philanthropist tastes the product of a machine that processes human sewage into drinking water and electricity. |
|
The greatest immediate threat is always lack of adequate drinking water. |
|
The groundwater table for our drinking water supply is 180 metres underground and is dropping by one meter every year due to our unsustainable consumption. |
|
The GSE liquid can be used in sprays for skin and feet, on your toothbrush, as a gargle and even added to questionable drinking water when traveling. |
|
A more likely source of minerals other than drinking water is provided by the food we eat, in which plants and animals have already accumulated what is necessary. |
|
The rough red Italian vino was on the table for every meal and we drank it instead of water, not being too certain of the purity of the ship's drinking water. |
|
A British sailor survived on a liferaft for three nights in a storm-tossed sea without food or drinking water after his boat sank off Spain's Balearic Islands. |
|
Australian technology and expertise will play a key role in a multi-billion dollar scheme to provide Manila's population of 11 million with drinking water on tap. |
|
Placed in drinking water, fluoride can serve people who otherwise have poor access to dental care. |
|
For eight years they never demanded any lessening of carbon-dioxide emissions and allowed arsenic to remain in the drinking water of millions of Americans. |
|
Reverse osmosis is used to prepare drinking water from sea water. |
|
After the base received an overage of drinking water, base officials decided to place the boxes in strategic locations around the base so water would be easily accessible. |
|
I am going to start drinking water like it's going out of style. |
|
Water used for this purpose must be drinking water or clean seawater. |
|
For 1 month, most mice received drinking water laced with uranium or diethylstilbestrol, an estrogen-mimicking drug. |
|
The Environment Agency is responsible for environmental regulation, and the Drinking Water Inspectorate for regulating drinking water quality. |
|
Plagues were easily spread by lice, unsanitary drinking water, armies, or by poor sanitation. |
|
|
Place drinking water in the reservoir, and test the functionality of the lick spouts with a paper towel. |
|
In August 2005, they supplied drinking water to poor people affected by the heat wave in the United States. |
|
Although Uther ultimately triumphs, he dies after drinking water from a spring the Saxons had poisoned. |
|
Even in low concentrations in drinking water supplies, perchlorate is known to inhibit the uptake of iodine by the thyroid gland. |
|
For example, the US Environmental Protection Agency have studied the impacts of perchlorate on the environment as well as drinking water. |
|
Welsh Water provides drinking water supply and wastewater services to Swansea. |
|
Today Gibraltar's supply of drinking water comes entirely from desalination, with a separate supply of saltwater for sanitary purposes. |
|
New York City is supplied with drinking water by the protected Catskill Mountains watershed. |
|
Based in Whitehall, it produces an annual report showing the quality of and problems associated with drinking water. |
|
Member states also have to publish drinking water quality reports every three years, and the European Commission is to publish a summary report. |
|
Until 2006 the European Commission has not published a summary report on drinking water quality. |
|
Circa 2009 Sana'a may be the first capital city in the world to run out of drinking water. |
|
Ground water is water beneath Earth's surface, often pumped for drinking water. |
|
In the case of groundwater, the main issue is contamination of drinking water, if the aquifer is abstracted for human use. |
|
Health problems can occur where eutrophic conditions interfere with drinking water treatment. |
|
Sedimentary rocks are also important sources of natural resources like coal, fossil fuels, drinking water or ores. |
|
Safe drinking water is essential to humans and other lifeforms even though it provides no calories or organic nutrients. |
|
The distribution of drinking water is done through municipal water systems, tanker delivery or as bottled water. |
|
To halve, by 2015, the proportion of people without sustainable access to safe drinking water is one of the Millennium Development Goals. |
|
Along its course, the Danube is a source of drinking water for about 20 million people. |
|
|
The city has had fountains for more than two thousand years, and they have provided drinking water and decorated the piazzas of Rome. |
|
In Russia, approximately 70 per cent of drinking water comes from surface water and 30 per cent from groundwater. |
|
It is when drinking water is unavailable or withdrawn, that the urine becomes highly concentrated with uric acid and urates. |
|
Water supply in Sierra Leone is characterised by limited access to safe drinking water. |
|
In rural areas, the Directorate of Rural Water Supply in the Ministry of Agriculture, Water and Forestry is in charge of drinking water supply. |
|
Bolivias's drinking water and Sanitation coverage has greatly improved since 1990 due to a considerable increase in sectoral investment. |
|
Advances have also been achieved concerning the disinfection of drinking water and in sewage treatment. |
|
In response, the Franciscans and Dominicans created public fountains and aqueducts to guarantee access to drinking water. |
|
Water quality laws govern the release of pollutants into water resources, including surface water, ground water, and stored drinking water. |
|
Some water quality laws, such as drinking water regulations, may be designed solely with reference to human health. |
|
The resulting drinking water became so polluted in Hungary that over 700 villages had to be supplied by tanks, bottles and plastic bags. |
|
Ion exchangers and demineralized water are used in all chemical industries, drinking water production, and many food industries. |
|
It is used as a disinfectant in water treatment, especially to make drinking water and in large public swimming pools. |
|
Calcium hypochlorite is commonly used to sanitize public swimming pools and disinfect drinking water. |
|
Risk factors for the disease include poor sanitation, not enough clean drinking water, and poverty. |
|
The Haitian government's inability to provide safe drinking water after the 2010 earthquake led to an increase in cholera cases as well. |
|
The Alps provide lowland Europe with drinking water, irrigation, and hydroelectric power. |
|
Surface runoff from ridgeline development can contaminate rivers and streams that supply drinking water downstream. |
|
Early schemes to use the moors as a source of drinking water involved the construction of water channels called leats. |
|
Project management perversion of drinking water systems, sewage, rainwater and optical loop for the second Angevin Angevin tramline. |
|
|
Further, we investigated the effect of giving acacia gum in the drinking water concomitantly with adenine on the above parameters. |
|
I live in a high rise locality and we get our drinking water through water cans. |
|
Tiny water fleas ingest the larvae first, and they are easily filtered from drinking water. |
|
The data for the water fountains were compared with what we found in the local municipal drinking water supplies. |
|
More importantly, water softeners do not remove any of the serious drinking water contamination problems. |
|
Expression of Interest for Training repairmen on the care and maintenance of drinking water works and keeping records of repair. |
|
Providing drinking water, the source of life, for those who need is a great and highly rewardable act of benevolence. |
|
In general, the barium content in drinking water is not regulated by directives or drinking water standards. |
|
We are confident and able to ensure safe drinking water to residents in Liuzhou City. |
|
Preprogrammed free applications, like bromate and brewery tests, make it the perfect choice for drinking water and beverage testing. |
|
Nitrate in drinking water can cause methaemoglobinaemia in infants, which has been reported from several countries. |
|
Their findings suggest higher nitrate levels in the drinking water of smaller water systems that typically serve Latino and tenter communities. |
|
Sources of mercury include dental amalgams, contaminated drinking water, contaminated fish, and the vaccine preservative thimerosal. |
|
Recycling toilet water to someday use as drinking water for much of Los Angeles means the city has sunk to new lows. |
|
Clostridium perfringens and somatic coliphages as indicators of the efficiency of drinking water treatment for viruses and protozoan cysts. |
|
In addition, this chemical should not kill nontarget organisms or present a hazard to people drinking water from the same source. |
|
Also, the stars contain an oxidizer, called perchlorate, that could settle onto the ground and get into drinking water. |
|
Bactericidal effect of chlorine on Mycobacterium paratuberculosis in drinking water. |
|
Other minor expenses will include supplements, dewormer, a pail for drinking water, a bowl for feed or other supplements and a hay feeder. |
|
Lack of clean drinking water introduces risks of bacillary dysentery, cholera, diarrheal disease, typhoid, hepatitis A, and other diseases. |
|
|
The quest for safe drinking water in the People's Republic of Bangladesh currently seems to be a lose-lose endeavor. |
|
Environmental Protection Agency is developing standards for perchlorate in drinking water. |
|
For years, many scientists and dentists have called for banning fluoride in toothpaste and drinking water. |
|
Dry mouth can be relieved by drinking water, chewing sugar-free gum or using artificial saliva or saliva stimulants. |
|
After that he instructed the people not to draw drinking water from rivers or creeks, for that water 'is alam ka pipi. |
|
From these, the drinking water is passed on to the next pumping station, partly with the help of gravity. |
|
There is growing concern about the operations of PWS responsible for providing safe drinking water to people. |
|
City officials also insisted that construction in the neighborhood jarred the pipes and caused residue to flake off into the drinking water. |
|
But in some natural drinking water, fluoride levels may be above those considered safe by the World Health Organisation. |
|
The removal of fluoride from drinking water is one of the most important environmental issues in the world. |
|
The bacteria in the drinking water sickened the whole village. |
|
On the other hands excessive withdrawal of groundwater resources has other consequences like Nitrate increscent in drinking water and Tehran aquifer instability. |
|
Environmentalists of Kyrgyzstan suggest holding public hearings in Parliament to assess strategic reserves of drinking water in Kyrgyzstan and their preservation. |
|
Because of the general lack of sanitation and due to poor quality of drinking water, helminthiasis and gastrointestinal disorders are endemic in rural Bangladesh. |
|
In areas where hydrilla-infested lakes supply drinking water and herbicides can't be used, officials sometimes stock lakes with sterile, hydrilla-eating grass carp. |
|
This objective of the study was to determine the removal efficiency of arsenic from drinking water by using Fenton's reagent followed by passage through zero valent iron. |
|
Cryptosporidium has the ability to produce oocysts that are resistant to chlorine levels normally used to disinfect drinking water or swimming pools. |
|
Microbial diversities and environmental pathogens within drinking water biofilms grown on the common premise plumbing materials unplasticized polyvinylchloride and copper. |
|
Local officials who have spent months lobbying federal and state lawmakers for a drinking water standard called the announcement by NTP a breakthrough. |
|
Trihalomethanes in the drinking water of Concepcion and Talcahuano, Chile. |
|
|
The company also recently introduced an application of its Aseptrol timed-release chlorine dioxide technology for use in deodorizing and disinfecting drinking water. |
|
They included chloroform, a by-product of disinfecting drinking water, the solvent carbon tetrachloride, and vinyl chloride, which is used to make plastics. |
|
Thus, students often have a difficult time predicting conditions that will result in, or prevent, drinking water hazards from back siphonage or back pressure. |
|
It is important growers adhere to the current guidelines on metaldehyde use to avoid contaminating watercourses and protect drinking water supplies. |
|
To increase sustainable access to safe drinking water by implementing 11 autonomously managed water networks in the peri-urban areas of Mbuji-Mayi in Kasai Oriental Province. |
|
The finance will be utilized majorly to uplift the Connecticuts sewage plants and drinking water systems moreover to supplant aging infrastructure. |
|
The panel he chaired found only trace levels of MTBE in 5 percent to 10 percent of the drinking water in areas where reformulated gasoline is sold. |
|
A Bangladeshi receptionist in a hotel was brutally murdered by an Egyptian resident pilgrim for advising him against using the cold drinking water for ablutions. |
|
Because it alkalinizes water, thus making drinking water less acidic, it decreases absorption of aluminum, which should result in less deposition of aluminum in brain tissue. |
|
Following the decline of mining in the late 19th century a water treatment plant was eventually built and the tarn now supplies drinking water for Coniston village. |
|
The location they selected was largely cut off from the mainland and offered little game for hunting, no fresh drinking water, and very limited ground for farming. |
|
Water fit for human consumption is called drinking water or potable water. |
|
In places such as North Africa and the Middle East, where water is more scarce, access to clean drinking water was and is a major factor in human development. |
|
Nearly 500 million Chinese lack access to safe drinking water. |
|
Water pollution causes approximately 14,000 deaths per day, mostly due to contamination of drinking water by untreated sewage in developing countries. |
|
This is also a main source of drinking water for large parts of Oslo. |
|
The aqueduct also supplied drinking water to a reservoir at Hurleston. |
|
Technical standards are usually voluntary, like ISO 9000 requirements, but may be obligatory, enforced by government norms, like drinking water quality requirements. |
|
It also ranks high in life expectancy and in safe drinking water. |
|
However, it was observed that some herbicides were present in the recycled water at levels below drinking water standards due to detection of herbicides in the MF permeate. |
|
|
Up to 77 million people are exposed to toxic arsenic from drinking water. |
|
The Upper Derwent Valley reservoirs were built from the mid 20th century onward to supply drinking water to the East Midlands and South Yorkshire. |
|
Sewage works were improved, as was the quality of drinking water. |
|
Aqueducts were used everywhere in the empire not just to supply drinking water for private houses but to supply other needs such as irrigation, public fountains, and thermae. |
|
The likely source of the dioxane is the Twin Cities Army Ammunition Plant, which was identified as the source of other contaminants in New Brighton's drinking water supply. |
|
California State law requires water agencies with more than 10,000 water service connections to fluoridate their drinking water supplies if outside funding is available. |
|