Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Water Purification:. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 3 page paper provides an examination of why water purification is an important environmental issue. This paper highlights the many environmental problems which are a result of this issue, as well as information about possible solutions. Bibliography lists 1 source.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_GSpurewa.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
we understand the importance of clean water in terms of health, it is important to understand how water becomes safe and the treatment process which it must go through in
order to become pure. Differen processes are used in different circumstances, but all water must be treated in order to be safe for drinking, since impure water can lead
to a host of health complications. Public water systems exist to provide the public with safe drinking water, and while
they may be publicly or privately owned, they must all treat their water to varying extents (Drinking Water Treatment). Types of treatment will depend upon the size of the
facility, whether they use ground or surface water, and the quality of the water source (Drinking Water Treatment). The larger-scale water supply systems typically rely on surface water sources,
while smaller systems tend to rely on ground water (Drinking Water Treatment). There are also community water systems, and these serve
about 35% of the population (Drinking Water Treatment). These systems use ground water for their water supply, which is usually pumped from wells varying in depth (Drinking Water Treatment).
"The remaining 65 percent of the population served by CWSs receive water taken primarily from surface water sources like rivers, lakes, and reservoirs" (Drinking Water Treatment).
Raw water must be treated in order to be purified (Drinking Water Treatment). Ground water is sometimes an exception since it is possible
for ground water to meet federal requirements in some cases without further treating the water (Drinking Water Treatment). Typically however, most ground water will still need the addition of
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