Water Pollution In Iowa

Words: 1842
Pages: 8

If one were to walk to the river in Iowa Falls, they wouldn’t see a clear and clean river, they would see a dirty brown river, where the bottom of the river isn’t visible through the murkiness. Water pollution in Iowa affects life in Iowa and many ways, for both humans and nature-- with most consequences being overwhelmingly negative. While looking at the river, one might ask his or herself, “What can be done to fix the pollution? What has already been done?” and “Have those failed or succeeded?” These issues and more will be examined in this paper.
Even if no one ever planned to swim or fish in the Iowa River, Iowa’s water pollution problem is an important and interesting topic: dirty water affects how Iowans can use their lakes, rivers,
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An example would be social order: seniors in high school have more privileges than underclassman. Another would be the differences between North Korea’s and USA’s government. Styles of architecture would also be one, as in natural disaster prone places, they build to withstand those disasters. Culture is important because it affects how people act and it also helps or worsens people’s quality of life. This relates to the topic of water pollution in Iowa because Iowa’s emphasis on farming has caused many of the pollution problems. The culture makes it easier for the pollution to keep occuring because some proposed solutions would make how farmers currently farm more difficult.
Society is a group of people who live together in an organized manner. Examples of society at a large scale would be American society. On a smaller scale, Nuclear families and extended families are important family dynamics in the US. The different parts of society work together to improve life for themselves and society. This relates to the subject of water pollution in Iowa because many jobs in Iowa depend on farming. Certain laws to prevent water pollution don’t get passed because some farmers think that it will harm them or their business in some
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This happens because “rainfall, snowmelt or irrigation water run over land or through the ground and pick up pollutants and deposit them into streams, lakes or groundwater” (“Environmental Protection”). These pollutants are nutrients, bacteria, and the leading nonpoint pollutant, sediment, which usually comes from agriculture practices (“Environmental Protection”). The practices, such as “cropland tillage and livestock in pastures, woodlands and feedlots” (“Environmental Protection”), often provide useful benefits to farmers at the expense of the watersheds becoming dirtied with pollutants; in turn, that makes the lakes and rivers Iowans live near and the groundwater they live off of polluted. If one ever wondered why the Iowa River was murky and looked the color of dirt, there’s the answer; “nonpoint source pollution is responsible for sediment that fills in lakes and streams, covers fish habitat, and reduces visibility in the water” (“Environmental Protection”). This doesn’t just ruin the recreational value of Iowa’s waters, it sometimes can destroy fish and wildlife habitats completely (“Environmental