Dictionary Definition
contamination
Noun
1 the state of being contaminated [syn: taint]
2 a substance that contaminates [syn: contaminant]
3 the act of contaminating or polluting;
including (either intentionally or accidentally) unwanted
substances or factors [syn: pollution] [ant: decontamination]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
-
- Rhymes: -eɪʃǝn
Noun
- The act or process of contaminating; pollution; defilement; taint; also, that which contaminates.
- A grammatical blend, grammatical contamination, e.g. Wiktionary < wiki + dictionary.
Translations
The act or process of contaminating
- Finnish: saastuminen, pilaantuminen, saastuttaminen
- Italian: contaminazione
A grammatical blend
- Finnish: sanasekauma
Extensive Definition
- For the 1980 italian sciencefiction- and horrormovie, see Contamination (film)
Sometimes the term pollution is extended to
include any substance when it occurs at such unnaturally high
concentration within a system that it endangers the stability of
that system. For example, water is innocuous and essential for
life, and yet at very high concentration, it could be considered a
pollutant: if a person were to drink an excessive quantity of
water, the physical system could be so overburdened that breakdown
and even death could result. Another example is the potential of
excessive noise to induce imbalance in a person's mental state,
resulting in malfunction and psychosis; this has been used
as a weapon in warfare.
Pollution control
Pollution control is a term used in environmental
management. It means the control of emissions
and effluents into
air, water or soil. Without pollution control, the waste products
from consumption, heating, agriculture, mining, manufacturing,
transportation and other human activities, whether they accumulate
or disperse, will degrade the environment.
In the hierarchy of controls, pollution
prevention and waste
minimization are more desirable than pollution control.
Pollution control devices
Major forms of pollution and major polluted areas
The major forms of pollution are listed below
along with the particular pollutants relevant to each of
them:
- Air pollution, the release of chemicals and particulates into the atmosphere. Common air pollutants include carbon monoxide, sulfur dioxide, chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) and nitrogen oxides produced by industry and motor vehicles. Photochemical ozone and smog are created as nitrogen oxides and hydrocarbons react to sunlight.
- Water pollution, by the release of waste products and contaminants into surface runoff into river drainage systems, leaching into groundwater, liquid spills, wastewater discharges, eutrophication and littering.
- Soil contamination occurs when chemicals are released by spill or underground leakage. Among the most significant soil contaminants are hydrocarbons, heavy metals, MTBE, herbicides, pesticides and chlorinated hydrocarbons.
- Radioactive contamination, resulting from 20th century activities in atomic physics, such as nuclear power generation and nuclear weapons research, manufacture and deployment. (See alpha emitters and actinides in the environment.)
- Noise pollution, which encompasses roadway noise, aircraft noise, industrial noise as well as high-intensity sonar.
- Light pollution, includes light trespass, over-illumination and astronomical interference.
- Visual pollution, which can refer to the presence of overhead power lines, motorway billboards, scarred landforms (as from strip mining), open storage of trash or municipal solid waste.
- Thermal pollution, is a temperature change in natural water bodies caused by human influence, such as use of water as coolant in a power plant.
The Blacksmith
Institute issues annually a list of the world's worst polluted
places. In the 2007 issues the ten top nominees are located in
Azerbaijan,
China,
India,
Peru, Russia, Ukraine and
Zambia.
Sources and causes
Motor vehicle emissions are one of the leading causes of air pollution. China, United States, Russia, Mexico, and Japan are the world leaders in air pollution emissions; however, Canada is the number two country, ranked per capita. Principal stationary pollution sources include chemical plants, coal-fired power plants, oil refineries,Pollution can also be the consequence of a
natural disaster. For example, hurricanes often involve water
contamination from sewage, and petrochemical spills from
ruptured boats or automobiles. Larger scale and
environmental damage is not uncommon when coastal oil rigs or
refineries are
involved. Some sources of pollution, such as nuclear
power plants or oil tankers,
can produce widespread and potentially hazardous releases when
accidents occur.
In the case of noise
pollution the dominant source class is the motor
vehicle, producing about ninety percent of all unwanted noise
worldwide.
Effects
Human health
Adverse air quality
can kill many organisms including humans. Ozone pollution can cause
respiratory
disease, cardiovascular
disease, throat
inflammation, chest pain, and congestion. Water pollution causes
approximately 14,000 deaths per day, mostly due to contamination of
drinking
water by untreated sewage in developing
countries. Oil spills can cause skin irritations and rashes. Noise
pollution induces hearing
loss, high
blood pressure, stress,
and sleep
disturbance.
Ecosystems
- Sulfur dioxide and oxides of nitrogen can cause acid rain which reduces the pH value of soil.
- Soil can become infertile and unsuitable for plants. This will affect other organisms in the food web.
- Smog and haze can reduce the amount of sunlight received by plants to carry out photosynthesis.
- Invasive species can out compete native species and reduce biodiversity. Invasive plants can contribute debris and biomolecules (allelopathy) that can alter soil and chemical compositions of an environment, often reducing native species competitiveness.
- Biomagnification describes a situation where toxins may be pass through trophic levels, becoming exponentially more concentrated in the process.
Regulation and monitoring
To protect the environment from the adverse effects of pollution, many nations worldwide have enacted legislation to regulate various types of pollution as well as to mitigate the adverse effects of pollution.Regulation and monitoring by region
International
The Kyoto Protocol is an amendment to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), an international treaty on global warming. It also reaffirms sections of the UNFCCC. Countries which ratify this protocol commit to reduce their emissions of carbon dioxide and five other greenhouse gases, or engage in emissions trading if they maintain or increase emissions of these gases.An
UN environmental conference held in Bali 3 - 14 December
2007 with the participation from 180 countries aims to replace the
Kyoto
Protocol, which will end in 2012. During the first day of the
conference USA,
Saudi
Arabia and Canada were
presented with the "Fossil-of-the-day-award", a symbolic bag of
coal for their negative impact on the global climate. The bags
included the flags of the respective countries.
China
China's rapid industrialization has substantially increased pollution. China has some relevant regulations: the 1979 Environmental Protection Law, which was largely modelled on U.S. legislation. But the environment continues to deteriorate. Twelve years after the law, only one Chinese city was making an effort to clean up its water discharges. This indicates that China is about 30 years behind the U.S. schedule of environmental regulation and 10 to 20 years behind Europe. In July 2007, it was reported that the World Bank reluctantly censored a report revealing that 750,000 people in China die every year as a result of pollution-related diseases. China's State Environment Protection Agency and the Health Ministry asked the World Bank to cut the calculations of premature deaths from the report fearing the revelation would provoke "social unrest".Europe
The United Kingdom
In the 1840s, the United Kingdom brought onto the statute books legislation to control water pollution. It was extended to all rivers and coastal water by 1961. However, currently the clean up of historic contamination is controlled under a specific statutory scheme found in Part IIA of the Environmental Protection Act 1990 (Part IIA), as inserted by the Environment Act 1995, and other ‘rules’ found in regulations and statutory guidance. The Act came into force in England in April 2000.Within the current regulatory framework,
Pollution Prevention and Control (PPC) is a regime for controlling
pollution from certain industrial activities. The regime introduces
the concept of Best
Available Techniques ("BAT") to environmental regulations.
Operators must use the BAT to control pollution from their
industrial activities to prevent, and where that is not
practicable, to reduce to acceptable levels, pollution to air, land
and water from industrial activities. The Best Available Techniques
also aim to balance the cost to the operator against benefits to
the environment. The system of Pollution Prevention and Control is
replacing that of Integrated Pollution Control (IPC) (which was
established by the Environmental Protection Act 1990) and is taking
effect between 2000 and 2007. The Pollution Prevention and Control
regime implements the European Directive (EC/96/61) on integrated
pollution prevention and control.
United States
The United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) established threshold standards for air pollutants to protect human health on January 1, 1970. One of the ratings chemicals are given is carcinogenicity. In addition to the classification "unknown", designated levels range from non-carcinogen, to likely and known carcinogen. Some scientists have said that the concentrations which most of these levels indicate are far too high and the exposure of people should be less. In 1999, the United States EPA replaced the Pollution Standards Index (PSI) with the Air Quality Index (AQI) to incorporate new PM2.5 and Ozone standards. The United States Congress passed the Clean Air Act in 1963 to legislate the reduction of smog and atmospheric pollution in general. That legislation has subsequently been amended and extended in 1966, 1970, 1977 and 1990. Numerous state and local governments have enacted similar legislation either implementing or filling in locally important gaps in the national program. The national Clean Air Act and similar state legislative acts have led to the widespread use of atmospheric dispersion modeling in order to analyze the air quality impacts of proposed major actions.Passage of the Clean Water
Act amendments of 1977 required strict permitting for any
contaminant discharge to navigable waters, and also
required use of best management practices for a wide range of other
water discharges including thermal pollution.
Passage of the Noise
Control Act established mechanisms of setting emission
standards for virtually every source of noise including motor
vehicles, aircraft, certain types of HVAC equipment and
major appliances. It also put local government on notice as to
their responsibilities in land use
planning to address noise
mitigation. This noise
regulation framework comprised a broad data base detailing the
extent of noise
health effects.
The state of California's
Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment (OEHHA) has
maintained an independent list of substances with product labeling
requirements as part of Proposition
65 since 1986.
With the 1990 Clean Air
Act, the EPA began a
controversial carbon
trading system in which tradable rights to emit a specified
level of carbon are granted to polluters.
Canada
In Canada the regulation of pollution and its effects are monitored by a number of organizations depending on the nature of the pollution and its location. The three levels of governemnt (Federal - Canada Wide; Provincial; and Municipal) equally share in the responsibilities, and in the monitoring and correction of pollution.For the Air there is the organization
"Environment Canada", and for specific provincial duties, there are
the respective branches of the Provincial entities that deal with
areas such as potable water, Oceans, and the Natural Resources of
the lands and waters.
All together quite a hodgepodge of offices
There are laws and regulations written for the
Air, Water, and Soil, but these are subject to change at any given
time depending on the Government of the Day.
Currently Adding entries as they pop up with
external links and references.
History
Prehistory
Humankind has some effect upon the environment since the Paleolithic era during which the ability to generate fire was acquired. In the Iron Age, the use of tooling led to the practice of metal grinding on a small scale and resulted in minor accumulations of discarded material probably easily dispersed without too much impact. Human wastes would have polluted rivers or water sources to some degree. However, these effects could be expected predominantly to be dwarfed by the natural world.Ancient cultures
The first advanced civilizations of Mesopotamia, Egypt, India, China, Persia, Greece and Rome increased the use of water for their manufacture of goods, increasingly forged metal and created fires of wood and peat for more elaborate purposes (for example, bathing, heating). Still, at this time the scale of higher activity did not disrupt ecosystems or greatly alter air or water quality.Middle Ages
The European Dark Ages during the early Middle Ages were a great boon for the environment, in that industrial activity fell, and population levels did not grow rapidly. Toward the end of the Middle Ages populations grew and concentrated more within cities, creating pockets of readily evident contamination. In certain places air pollution levels were recognizable as health issues, and water pollution in population centers was a serious medium for disease transmission from untreated human waste.Since travel and widespread information were less
common, there did not exist a more general context than that of
local consequences in which to consider pollution. Foul air would
have been considered a nuissance and wood, or eventually, coal
burning produced smoke,
which in sufficient concentrations could be a health hazard in
proximity to living quarters. Septic contamination or poisoning of
a clean drinking water source was very easily fatal to those who
depended on it, especially if such a resource was rare. Superstitions
predominated and the extent of such concerns would probably have
been little more than a sense of moderation and an avoidance of
obvious extremes.
Official acknowledgement
But gradually increasing populations and the proliferation of basic industrial processes saw the emergence of a civilization that began to have a much greater collective impact on its surroundings. It was to be expected that the beginnings of environmental awareness would occur in the more developed cultures, particularly in the densest urban centers. The first medium warranting official policy measures in the emerging western world would be the most basic: the air we breathe.The earliest known writings concerned with
pollution were Arabic
medical treatises written between the 9th and 13th centuries,
by physicians such as al-Kindi
(Alkindus), Qusta ibn
Luqa (Costa ben Luca),
Muhammad ibn Zakarīya Rāzi (Rhazes), Ibn
Al-Jazzar, al-Tamimi,
al-Masihi,
Ibn Sina
(Avicenna), Ali ibn
Ridwan, Ibn Jumay,
Isaac Israeli ben Solomon, Abd-el-latif,
Ibn al-Quff, and Ibn
al-Nafis. Their works covered a number of subjects related to
pollution such as air
contamination, water
contamination, soil
contamination, solid
waste mishandling, and
environmental assessments of certain localities.
King
Edward I of England banned the
burning of sea-coal by
proclamation in London in 1272,
after its smoke had become a problem. But the fuel was so common in
England that this earliest of names for it was acquired because it
could be carted away from some shores by the wheelbarrow. Air
pollution would continue to be a problem there, especially later
during the industrial revolution, and extending into the recent
past with the Great
Smog of 1952. This same city also recorded one of the earlier
extreme cases of water quality problems with the Great Stink
on the Thames of 1858,
which led to construction of the London
sewerage system soon afterward.
It was the industrial
revolution that gave birth to environmental pollution as we
know it today. The emergence of great factories and consumption of
immense quantities of coal
and other fossil fuels
gave rise to unprecedented air
pollution and the large volume of industrial chemical discharges added to
the growing load of untreated human waste. Chicago and
Cincinnati
were the first two American cities to enact laws ensuring cleaner
air in 1881. Other cities followed around the country until early
in the 20th century, when the short lived Office of Air Pollution
was created under the Department of the Interior. Extreme smog
events were experienced by the cities of Los Angeles
and Donora,
Pennsylvania in the late 1940s, serving as another public
reminder.
Modern awareness
Pollution began to draw major public attention in
the United States between the mid-1950s and early 1970s, when
Congress passed the Noise
Control Act, the Clean Air
Act, the Clean Water
Act and the
National Environmental Policy Act.
Bad bouts of local pollution helped increase
consciousness. PCB
dumping in the Hudson River
resulted in a ban by the
EPA on consumption of its fish in 1974. Long-term dioxin contamination at Love Canal
starting in 1947 became a national news story in 1978 and led to
the
Superfund legislation of 1980. Legal proceedings in the 1990s
helped bring to light Chromium-6
releases in California--the
champions of whose victims became famous. The pollution of
industrial land gave rise to the name brownfield, a term now common
in city
planning. DDT was banned in most
of the developed world after the publication of Rachel Carson's
Silent
Spring.
The development of nuclear science introduced
radioactive
contamination, which can remain lethally radioactive for
hundreds of thousands of years. Lake
Karachay, named by the Worldwatch
Institute as the "most polluted spot" on earth, served as a
disposal site for the Soviet Union thoroughout the 1950s and 1960s.
Second place may go to the to the area of Chelyabinsk U.S.S.R. (see
reference below) as the "Most polluted place on the planet".
Nuclear
weapons continued to be tested in the Cold War,
sometimes near inhabited areas, especially in the earlier stages of
their development. The toll on the worst-affected populations and
the growth since then in understanding about the critical threat to
human health posed by radioactivity has also
been a prohibitive complication associated with nuclear
power. Though extreme care is practiced in that industry, the
potential for disaster suggested by incidents such as those at
Three
Mile Island and Chernobyl pose a
lingering specter of public mistrust. One legacy of nuclear
testing before most forms
were banned has been significantly raised levels of background
radiation.
International catastrophes such as the wreck of
the Amoco
Cadiz oil tanker off the coast of Brittany in 1978
and the Bhopal
disaster in 1984 have demonstrated the universality of such
events and the scale on which efforts to address them needed to
engage. The borderless nature of the atmosphere and oceans
inevitably resulted in the implication of pollution on a planetary
level with the issue of global warming. Most recently the term
persistent organic pollutant (POP) has come to describe a group
of chemicals such as PBDEs and PFCs among others.
Though their effects remain somewhat less well understood owing to
a lack of experimental data, they have been detected in various
ecological habitats far removed from industrial activity such as
the Arctic, demonstrating diffusion and bioaccumulation after only
a relatively brief period of widespread use.
Growing evidence of local and global pollution
and an increasingly informed public over time have given rise to
environmentalism and
the environmental
movement, which generally seek to limit human impact on the
environment.
Philosophical recognition
Throughout history from Ancient Greece to Andalusia, Ancient China, central Europe during the Renaissance until today, philosophers ranging from Aristotle, Al-Farabi, Al-Ghazali, Averroes, Buddha, Confucius, Dante, Hegel, Avicenna, Lao Tse, Maimonedes, Montesquieu, Nussbaum, Plato, Socrates and Sun Tzu wrote about the pollution of the body as well as the mind and soul.Perspectives
The earliest precursor of pollution generated by life forms would have been a natural function of their existence. The attendant consequences on viability and population levels fell within the sphere of natural selection. These would have included the demise of a population locally or ultimately, species extinction. Processes that were untenable would have resulted in a new balance brought about by changes and adaptations. At the extremes, for any form of life, consideration of pollution is superseded by that of survival.For mankind, the factor of technology is a
distinguishing and critical consideration, both as an enabler and
an additional source of byproducts. Short of survival, human
concerns include the range from quality of life to health hazards.
Since science holds experimental demonstration to be definitive,
modern treatment of toxicity or environmental harm involves
defining a level at which an effect is observable. Common examples
of fields where practical measurement is crucial include
automobile emissions control, industrial exposure (eg
Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) PELs), toxicology (eg LD50), and medicine (eg medication and radiation
doses).
"The solution to pollution is dilution", is a
dictum which summarizes a traditional approach to pollution
management whereby sufficiently diluted pollution is not harmful.
It is well-suited to some other modern, locally-scoped applications
such as laboratory safety procedure and hazardous
material release emergency management. But it assumes that the
dilutant is in virtually unlimited supply for the application or
that resulting dilutions are acceptable in all cases.
Such simple treatment for environmental pollution
on a wider scale might have had greater merit in earlier centuries
when physical survival was often the highest imperative, human
population and densities were lower, technologies were simpler and
their byproducts more benign. But these are often no longer the
case. Furthermore, advances have enabled measurement of
concentrations not possible before. The use of statistical methods
in evaluating outcomes has given currency to the principle of
probable harm in cases where assessment is warranted but resorting
to deterministic models is impractical or unfeasible. In addition,
consideration of the environment beyond direct impact on human
beings has gained prominence.
Yet in the absence of a superseding principle,
this older approach predominates practices throughout the world. It
is the basis by which to gauge concentrations of effluent for legal
release, exceeding which penalties are assessed or restrictions
applied. The regressive cases are those where a controlled level of
release is too high or, if enforceable, is neglected. Migration
from pollution dilution to elimination in many cases is confronted
by challenging economical and technological barriers.
Controversies
Industry and concerned citizens have battled for decades over the significance of various forms of pollution. Salient parameters of these disputes are whether:- a given pollutant affects all people or simply a genetically vulnerable set.
- an effect is only specific to certain species.
- whether the effect is simple, or whether it causes linked secondary and tertiary effects, especially on biodiversity
- an effect will only be apparent in the future and is presently negligible.
- the threshold for harm is present.
- the pollutant is of direct harm or is a precursor.
- employment or economic prosperity will suffer if the pollutant is abated.
Blooms of algae and the resultant eutrophication of lakes
and coastal ocean is considered pollution when it is caused by
nutrients from industrial, agricultural, or residential runoff in
either point
source or nonpoint
source form (see the article on eutrophication for more
information).
Heavy metals such as lead and mercury have a role
in geochemical cycles and they occur naturally. These metals may
also be mined and, depending on their processing, may be released
disruptively in large concentrations into an environment they had
previously been absent from. Just as the effect of anthropogenic
release of these metals into the environment may be considered
'polluting', similar environmental impacts could also occur in some
areas due to either autochthonous or historically 'natural'
geochemical activity.
Greenhouse gases and global warming
Carbon dioxide, while vital for photosynthesis, is sometimes referred to as pollution, because raised levels of the gas in the atmosphere are affecting the Earth's climate. Disruption of the environment can also highlight the connection between areas of pollution that would normally be classified separately, such as those of water and air. Recent studies have investigated the potential for long-term rising levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide to cause slight but critical increases in the acidity of ocean waters, and the possible effects of this on marine ecosystems.See also
References
External links
- Environment Agency (England and Wales)
- Environmental Assessment Agency - Canada
- Environmental Protection Agency - USA
- Environmental Defense Fund
- Extoxnet newsletters - environmental pollution news. Last update 1998.
- Environmental Working Group
- Institute for Energy and Environmental Research
- OEHHA proposition 65 list
- OSHA limits for air contaminants
- National Toxicology Program - from USA National Institutes of Health. Reports and studies on how pollutants affect people.
- Toxnet - NIH databases and reports on toxicology.
- Superfund - manages Superfund sites and the pollutants in them (CERCLA).
- Toxic Release Inventory - tracks how much waste USA companies release into the water and air. Gives permits for releasing specific quantities of these pollutants each year. Map
- Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry - Top 20 pollutants, how they affect people, what USA industries use them and what products they are found in.
- The ToxTutor from the National Library of Medicine - An excellent resource to review human toxicology.
- Pollution Information from, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
- World's Worst Polluted Places 2007, according to the Blacksmith Institute
- The World's Most Polluted Places at Time.com (a division of Time Magazine)
- Chelyabinsk: The Most Contaminated Spot on the Planet Documentary Film by Slawomir Grünberg (1996)
contamination in Afrikaans: Besoedeling
contamination in Arabic: تلوث
contamination in Bulgarian: Замърсяване
contamination in Catalan: Contaminació
contamination in Czech: Znečištění
contamination in Welsh: Llygredd
contamination in Danish: Forurening
contamination in German:
Umweltverschmutzung
contamination in Spanish: Contaminación
contamination in Esperanto: Poluo
contamination in Faroese: Dálking
contamination in French: Pollution
contamination in Galician: Contaminación
contamination in Hindi: प्रदूषण
contamination in Croatian: Kontaminacija
contamination in Indonesian: Pencemaran
contamination in Italian: Inquinamento
contamination in Hebrew: זיהום הסביבה
contamination in Lithuanian: Teršimas
contamination in Hungarian:
Környezetszennyezés
contamination in Marathi: प्रदूषण
contamination in Malay (macrolanguage):
Pencemaran
contamination in Dutch:
Milieuverontreiniging
contamination in Japanese: 公害
contamination in Norwegian: Forurensning
contamination in Norwegian Nynorsk:
Ureining
contamination in Polish: Zanieczyszczenie
środowiska
contamination in Portuguese: Poluição
contamination in Romanian: Poluare
contamination in Quechua: Sallqa waqlliy
contamination in Russian: Загрязнение
contamination in Simple English: Pollution
contamination in Slovak: Znečistenie životného
prostredia
contamination in Slovenian: Onesnaženje
contamination in Serbian: Контаминација
contamination in Finnish: Saaste
contamination in Swedish: Miljöförstöring
contamination in Tamil: சூழல் மாசடைதல்
contamination in Telugu: కాలుష్యం
contamination in Thai: มลพิษ
contamination in Vietnamese: Ô nhiễm môi
trường
contamination in Ukrainian: Забруднення
contamination in Walloon: Mannixhance
contamination in Chinese: 污染