Zinc distribution in a small stream receiving treated textile wastewater
<p>Effluent samples for a treated textile waste water and treated domestic sewage waste water and water and sediment samples for an 8.2 km region of Ash Camp Creek near Keysville, Virginia, were collected in June, 1977. Effluent and stream water samples were analyzed for various water quality...
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ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-439492021-05-05T05:40:28Z Zinc distribution in a small stream receiving treated textile wastewater Hay, Jonathan Charles Environmental Sciences and Engineering King, Paul H. Hoehn, Robert C. Boardman, Gregory D. LD5655.V855 1977.H385 Stream ecology Textile industry -- Environmental aspects Water -- Pollution Zinc <p>Effluent samples for a treated textile waste water and treated domestic sewage waste water and water and sediment samples for an 8.2 km region of Ash Camp Creek near Keysville, Virginia, were collected in June, 1977. Effluent and stream water samples were analyzed for various water quality parameters and for suspended, dissolved, and total zinc. Sediment samples were analyzed for zinc and percent loss on ignition. The treated textile waste water was the major source of zinc to the stream. The effluent and stream water samples exhibited a marked partitioning of zinc among the dissolved and suspended fractions of the water column. The ratios of mean dissolved to mean suspended zinc ranged from about 0.76 to about 1.40. The ratios of mean dissolved to total zinc and mean suspended to total zinc ranged from about 0.42 to 0.62 and from about 0.38 to 0.57, respectively. Anomalously high zinc concentrations were found in the sediments 0.80 m downstream from the point of discharge of the treated textile wastewater and appeared to be caused by sedimentation of suspended zinc induced by a reduction in stream velocity. The domestic discharge together with flow from a small unnamed tributary had a moderating effect on the water quality of the stream functioning to dilute stream pollutant load. Sulfide precipitation appeared to be an important mechanism by which zinc was concentrated in the sediments 40 m below the domestic sewage discharge. Zinc concentrations declined further downstream likely as a result of such factors as dilution, sedimentation, and sorption by inorganic sediment particles. Master of Science 2014-03-14T21:41:25Z 2014-03-14T21:41:25Z 1977-09-05 2010-07-28 2010-07-28 2010-07-28 Thesis Text etd-07282010-020237 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/43949 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-07282010-020237/ OCLC# 10619753 LD5655.V855_1977.H385.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 122 leaves BTD application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech |
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LD5655.V855 1977.H385 Stream ecology Textile industry -- Environmental aspects Water -- Pollution Zinc |
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LD5655.V855 1977.H385 Stream ecology Textile industry -- Environmental aspects Water -- Pollution Zinc Hay, Jonathan Charles Zinc distribution in a small stream receiving treated textile wastewater |
description |
<p>Effluent samples for a treated textile waste water and treated
domestic sewage waste water and water and sediment samples for an 8.2
km region of Ash Camp Creek near Keysville, Virginia, were collected in
June, 1977. Effluent and stream water samples were analyzed for various
water quality parameters and for suspended, dissolved, and total zinc.
Sediment samples were analyzed for zinc and percent loss on ignition.
The treated textile waste water was the major source of zinc to the
stream. The effluent and stream water samples exhibited a marked
partitioning of zinc among the dissolved and suspended fractions of
the water column. The ratios of mean dissolved to mean suspended
zinc ranged from about 0.76 to about 1.40. The ratios of mean dissolved
to total zinc and mean suspended to total zinc ranged from about 0.42
to 0.62 and from about 0.38 to 0.57, respectively. Anomalously high
zinc concentrations were found in the sediments 0.80 m downstream from
the point of discharge of the treated textile wastewater and appeared
to be caused by sedimentation of suspended zinc induced by a reduction
in stream velocity. The domestic discharge together with flow from a
small unnamed tributary had a moderating effect on the water quality
of the stream functioning to dilute stream pollutant load. Sulfide
precipitation appeared to be an important mechanism by which zinc was
concentrated in the sediments 40 m below the domestic sewage discharge.
Zinc concentrations declined further downstream likely as a result
of such factors as dilution, sedimentation, and sorption by inorganic
sediment particles. === Master of Science |
author2 |
Environmental Sciences and Engineering |
author_facet |
Environmental Sciences and Engineering Hay, Jonathan Charles |
author |
Hay, Jonathan Charles |
author_sort |
Hay, Jonathan Charles |
title |
Zinc distribution in a small stream receiving treated textile wastewater |
title_short |
Zinc distribution in a small stream receiving treated textile wastewater |
title_full |
Zinc distribution in a small stream receiving treated textile wastewater |
title_fullStr |
Zinc distribution in a small stream receiving treated textile wastewater |
title_full_unstemmed |
Zinc distribution in a small stream receiving treated textile wastewater |
title_sort |
zinc distribution in a small stream receiving treated textile wastewater |
publisher |
Virginia Tech |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10919/43949 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-07282010-020237/ |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT hayjonathancharles zincdistributioninasmallstreamreceivingtreatedtextilewastewater |
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1719402661387698176 |