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posted by janrinok on Thursday July 25 2019, @09:57AM   Printer-friendly

Homeowners who rely on private wells as their drinking water source can be vulnerable to bacteria, nitrates, and other contaminants that have known human health risks. Because they are not connected to a public drinking water supply, the homeowners are responsible for ensuring that their own drinking water is safe.

Similar to concerns that public drinking water treatment plants face, groundwater wells may be impacted by another group of contaminants—and they might be part of your daily use!

Ingredients in personal care items, over-the-counter and drink products are introduced into domestic wastewater streams and can persist through treatment technologies. "This causes trace-levels of these chemicals to be found in the environment," says Heather Gall. "Recently developed analytical technologies are now advanced enough for us to detect these compounds in water at increasingly low levels." Gall is an assistant professor at Pennsylvania State University who studies contaminants of emerging concern in surface and groundwater.

A fully-functioning septic system releases the effluent slowly into a septic field. The soil, roots, and soil microbes biodegrade pollutants in the water before it gets back into groundwater. However, in the U.S., 10-20% of septic tanks function poorly. This can increase the chance of these contaminants getting to groundwater, especially those that biodegrade slowly in the environment. After that, they can enter a downgradient household's well water.

The presence of medicines in drinking water raise public health concerns. Impacted water may have harmful effects when consumed, but whether the levels present in private wells are high enough to pose a threat is an understudied area of research.

So, Gall partnered with the Pennsylvania Master Well Owner Network. Twenty-six homeowners volunteered to collect water samples from their private wells. "Since our project engaged private well owners, we wanted to focus on compounds they may be familiar with," says Gall.

Gall's team chose to test water samples for four common antibiotics, two over-the-counter anti-inflammatory drugs, and one common stimulant. Each reacts differently with soil in the septic field in different ways. These chemicals can bind physically to soil particles. They also can react with soil, soil microbes, and other compounds in the septic field. It's a virtual chemistry experiment when active pharmaceutical ingredients reach the septic tank.

Gall found that medicines' ability to get to groundwater was mostly controlled by two factors: sorption potential and biodegradability.

Sorption refers to the likelihood of the medicine attaching to another substance like soil or water. Medicines with low sorption are not likely to attach to soil in the septic field. That makes them more likely to move quickly through the soil profile and reach groundwater. The medicine most likely to reach groundwater was ofloxacin. This antibiotic was the most frequently detected medicine in the groundwater samples. Naproxen, an anti-inflammatory drug, had the highest sorption, and was most likely to stay in the septic field. This could be the reason it was not detected in any of the groundwater samples of the study.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 25 2019, @11:30AM (4 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 25 2019, @11:30AM (#870997)

    Fallout-style water purifiers to every household. I have seen lot of such devices in India many decades ago, as a kitchen appliance, typically of the big refrigerator size. Why are American commoners so technologically underdeveloped?

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 25 2019, @11:55AM (3 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 25 2019, @11:55AM (#871009)

    Lots of Americans have some sort of filtration device in their homes. From active charcoal pitchers or tap mounts, to steam distillers and reverse osmosis systems. Go to a home supply/hardware store and you can even find showerhead units. Or you can outsource it to an outside company and have distlilled or purified water delivered regularly in 5 gallon jugs for your water cooler.

    • (Score: 2) by HiThere on Thursday July 25 2019, @07:46PM (2 children)

      by HiThere (866) Subscriber Badge on Thursday July 25 2019, @07:46PM (#871227) Journal

      Most of those things won't touch the pharmaceuticals in the water. (The distillation ones would, but remember that distilled water is unhealthy until you add back a decent ionic balance.)

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      • (Score: 2) by takyon on Saturday July 27 2019, @10:30AM (1 child)

        by takyon (881) <takyonNO@SPAMsoylentnews.org> on Saturday July 27 2019, @10:30AM (#871845) Journal

        There should be a number of ways to remineralize the distilled water: https://www.survivopedia.com/how-to-re-mineralize-water/ [survivopedia.com]

        Ideally, you could integrate the additive directly into the distillation system for convenience.

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        • (Score: 2) by HiThere on Saturday July 27 2019, @04:29PM

          by HiThere (866) Subscriber Badge on Saturday July 27 2019, @04:29PM (#871995) Journal

          The problem is remineralizing the water without adding back in the pollutants you were removing. I suppose the manufacturer could bake the minerals at a high enough temperature to destroy complex organics, but do they? Or you could bake the stuff that you extract, but that really ups the energy requirements. 451 Fahrenheit should be high enough, though, so it's not something beyond solar power and a fresnel lens.

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