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How are different types of pollution classified? - Geography

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Question

How are different types of pollution classified?

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Solution

  1. By Medium Affected:
    • Air Pollution: Contamination of the atmosphere by harmful gases, fine particles, and chemicals (e.g., carbon monoxide, sulfur dioxide, particulate matter).
    • Water Pollution: The introduction of harmful substances (e.g., industrial waste, sewage, agricultural runoff, oil spills) into water bodies like rivers, lakes, and oceans.
    • Soil (Land) Pollution: The buildup of toxic chemicals, pesticides, and heavy metals in the ground, degrading land quality.
    • Noise Pollution: Unwanted or excessive sounds that disrupt human and animal life (e.g., from traffic, construction, industrial machinery).
    • Light Pollution: The excessive or misdirected use of artificial outdoor light, which disrupts natural light patterns and ecosystems.
    • Thermal Pollution: The increase or decrease in the temperature of a natural water body or the environment, often due to the discharge of hot water from industrial processes.
    • Radioactive Pollution: The presence of radioactive substances in the environment, which poses long-term health and environmental hazards.
  2. By Type of Pollutant:
    1. Physical Pollution: The introduction of discarded materials, such as plastic waste, glass, and other non-biodegradable litter.
    2. Chemical Pollution: Contamination by specific harmful chemicals like heavy metals, pesticides, fertilizers, and industrial chemicals.
    3. Biological Pollution: The introduction of invasive or non-local living organisms (e.g., invasive species, pathogens, certain bacteria) into an ecosystem, disrupting the natural balance.
    4. Degradability:
      • Biodegradable Pollutants: Pollutants that can be rapidly broken down by natural processes (e.g., domestic sewage).
      • Non-biodegradable Pollutants: Pollutants that remain in the environment for many years in a stable condition (e.g., plastics, heavy metals, DDT).
    5. Origin:
      • Primary Pollutants: Emitted directly from an identifiable source (e.g., carbon monoxide from vehicle exhaust, sulfur dioxide from factories).
      • Secondary Pollutants: Formed in the atmosphere through chemical reactions between primary pollutants and natural atmospheric components (e.g., ground-level ozone, smog).
  3. By Source of Origin:
    Pollution can also be classified by where it originates.
    • Point Source Pollution: Pollutants discharged from a single, identifiable location (e.g., a specific factory pipe, a sewage treatment plant).
    • Non-point Source Pollution: Pollution from dispersed sources, making it difficult to trace back to a single origin (e.g., agricultural runoff from large fields, urban stormwater runoff).
    • Natural Pollution: Originates from natural processes (e.g., volcanic eruptions, forest fires, dust storms).
    • Artificial (Anthropogenic) Pollution: Originates from human activities (e.g., industrial processes, transportation, waste disposal).
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Chapter 15: Pollution-Types and Sources - SOLVE AND SCORE [Page 168]

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Rachna Sapra Geography [English] Class 9 ICSE
Chapter 15 Pollution-Types and Sources
SOLVE AND SCORE | Q D. 1. (b) | Page 168
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