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Home · Environment · Pollution · Waves of pollution

Waves of pollution

Broadcast Date: Oct. 26, 1966

By the 1960s, water pollution is impossible to ignore in Canada. Lake Erie is an algae-ridden mess and industry is creating hundreds of new chemical compounds with no safe disposal method. These chemicals are going straight into the country's lakes and it's a situation Canadians should not tolerate, a university professor tells CBC Radio. "The time is at hand when the chemical industry cannot dump this unwanted child on the doorstep of society," he says.

If citizens want to clean up their waterways — variously described as "a septic tank," "the nation's intestine" and "a chemical sluiceway" — they must first become aware of pollution. CBC's Matinee with Pat Patterson tackles the problem of our fouled waters.

Waves of pollution

• Large bodies of water, both freshwater and salt water, have a natural capacity to absorb and break down many waste materials that find their way in. When the amount of waste exceeds the water's capacity, or when the waste cannot be broken down, we call it pollution.
• Common sources of pollution include litter, municipal waste (sewage), agricultural runoff and industrial waste.

• Pollution is also defined as either "persistent" or "non-persistent."
• Non-persistent pollutants, such as sewage, fertilizers and some industrial waste, break down into their component parts quickly and leave no long-term damage.
• Persistent pollutants degrade much more slowly and can remain intact in the environment for many years. These include pesticides like DDT, petroleum products, radioactive elements, PCBs and some metals like lead and mercury.

• The first sign that Lake Erie was polluted came in 1933 when its western end turned bright green from too much algae. In the next two decades beaches around the lake were routinely closed due to high levels of coliform bacteria.
• In the 1950s the Niagara River, linking lakes Erie and Ontario, began to emit a foul odour. With brown sludgy water and towers of detergent foam, the famous Niagara Falls lost some appeal as a honeymoon spot.

• The first evidence Lake Erie was "dying" came in 1953. A limnologist, or lake researcher, discovered a staggering drop in the number of mayfly larvae at the bottom of Erie. That observation was paired with a proportionate jump in oligchaetes — "sludge worms" that thrive on very little oxygen.
• Five years later another limnologist discovered a large bottom section that was anoxic, or lacking any oxygen at all. This was highly abnormal.

• In short, Lake Erie was suffering from eutrophication. In this state, an overabundance of algae means an explosion in the number of micro-organisms that feed on it. These organisms in turn consume enough oxygen in a lake to choke out all other forms of life.
• Because the phenomenon of eutrophication was not easily conveyed to the public, science reporters in the early 1960s devised a simpler metaphor. They said Lake Erie's natural life cycle was accelerating and the lake was dying.

• Dr. George Burwash Langford, a guest on this CBC Radio program, was a professor of geology who founded the Great Lakes Institute at the University of Toronto in 1960. Its name and mandate later changed when it merged with the Environmental Sciences and Engineering program in the 1970s and became the Institute of Environmental Studies.

Waves of pollution

Medium: Radio

Program: Matinee with Pat Patterson

Broadcast Date: Oct. 26, 1966

Guest(s): Christian de Laet, George Burwash Langford, Don Stephens


Host: Pat Patterson

Duration: 8:04

Last updated:
Aug. 9, 2004


End of list




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