Using Wastewater Solids To Reclaim Strip-Mined Land ? Introduction

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Hugh McMillan
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
26
File Size:
862 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1973

Abstract

To protect the water supply for the Metropolitan Chicago area, the Illinois legislature, in 1889, created the Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago. To insure the quality of the water supply, the Sanitary District collected and diverted the wastes of 750,000 people away from Lake Michigan. Today, the Sanitary District collects and treats the wastes from a domestic population of 5 ¼ million people and an industrial waste load equivalent to 4 ¼ million people. The District serves Chicago and 120 other cities and suburbs in an 858 square mile area. An average of 1300 million gallons of wastewater is treated each day, producing as a by- product about 700 dry tons of solids which contains more than $10,000 worth of plant nutrients when equated to the value of commercial fertilizer purchased in the retail market. The Sanitary District considered several alternatives to past methods for disposing of these solids, and chose land application as a technique to utilize the solids produced by the wastewater treatment process in a beneficial manner.
Citation

APA: Hugh McMillan  (1973)  Using Wastewater Solids To Reclaim Strip-Mined Land ? Introduction

MLA: Hugh McMillan Using Wastewater Solids To Reclaim Strip-Mined Land ? Introduction. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1973.

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