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* Soluble inorganic material ([[ammonia]], road-salt, sea-salt, [[cyanide]], [[Hydrogen sulfide|hydrogen sulphide]], thiocyanates, thiosulphates)
* Soluble inorganic material ([[ammonia]], road-salt, sea-salt, [[cyanide]], [[Hydrogen sulfide|hydrogen sulphide]], thiocyanates, thiosulphates)
* Animals ([[Protozoa]], [[insect]]s, [[arthropod]]s, small [[fish]], abandoned [[pet]]s etc.)
* Animals ([[Protozoa]], [[insect]]s, [[arthropod]]s, small [[fish]], abandoned [[pet]]s etc.)
* Macro-solids ([[sanitary towel]]s, [[Diaper|nappies/ diapers]], [[condom]]s, [[needle]]s, childrens’ toys, body parts, etc.)
* Macro-solids ([[sanitary towel]]s, [[Diaper|nappies/ diapers]], [[condom]]s, [[needle]]s, children's toys, body parts, etc.)
* Gases (hydrogen sulphide, [[carbon dioxide]], [[methane]])
* Gases (hydrogen sulphide, [[carbon dioxide]], [[methane]])
* Emulsions ( oils in emulsion, [[paint]]s, [[adhesive]]s, [[mayonnaise]], hair colourants)
* Emulsions ( oils in emulsion, [[paint]]s, [[adhesive]]s, [[mayonnaise]], hair colourants)

Revision as of 18:32, 27 October 2005

Sewage is domestic, municipal, or industrial liquid waste products disposed of via a pipe or similar structure. The physical infrastructure , including pipes, pumps, screens, channels etc. used to convey sewage from it origin to the point of eventual treatment or disposal is termed sewerage, a term often mistakenly used to refer to sewage.

Composition of sewage

Sewage is a variable mixture containing of liquid material derived from some or all of the following sources:

  • Human waste (faeces, paper, wipes and urine + other bodily fluids)
  • Washing water (personal, clothes, floors etc.)
  • Rainfall collected on roofs, yards, hard-standing etc. (traces of oils and fuel but generally clean)
  • Surplus manufactured liquids from domestic sources ( drinks, cooking oil, pesticides, lubricating oil, paint, cleaning liquids etc.)
  • General urban rainfall run-off from roads, car-parks, roofs, side-walks or pavements (contains oils, animal faeces, litter, fuel residues, rubber residues, metals from vehicle exhausts etc)
  • Industrial cooling waters
  • Industrial process waters
  • Sea water ingress
  • Direct ingress of river water
  • Direct ingress of man-mad liquids (illegal disposal of pesticides, used oils etc.)

The composition of each sewage stream varies widely, but sewage derived from a large city can be expected to contain (the examples given here represent only a small proportion of the rage of materials actually encountered):

Sewage Disposal

( See Sewage Treatment)

In some urban areas, sewage is carried separately in sanitary sewers while runoff from streets is carried in storm drains. Access to either of these is typically through a manhole.

Sewage may drain directly into major watersheds with minimal or no treatment. When untreated, sewage can have serious impacts on the quality of an environment and on the health of people. Pathogens can cause a variety of illnesses. Some chemicals pose risks even at very low concentrations and can remain a threat for long periods of time because of bioaccumulation in animal or human tissue.

See also