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Most of the contaminants listed below are nuisances rather than causing health problems. These problems also tend to affect people more commonly if their water comes from a private well, surface water, or small water provider rather than from a large municipal water treatment company. Many of these contaminants, because they cause sediments, staining, and smells anywhere in the house, need to be removed by a whole house water treatment system. Common Water Problems: |
The table below may help you identify which contaminants to test for in your drinking water.
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Color of Water |
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Water Problem | Contaminant | Source of Contaminant | Health Effect(s) | Treatment(s) |
Blue to Blue-green | Copper | Much of copper
contamination comes from home plumbing and fixtures when the water is corrosive. |
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Cloudy, or Milky | Small air bubbles | Air dissolved in the water before or during pumping or treatment, may naturally be in well water. | Harmless | Bubbles will eventually rise to the surface and disappear |
Methane bubbles |
Bubbles will eventually rise to the surface and disappear
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Very fine dirt or clay particles, or organic matter | Naturally, from soil, rocks, and living things. | Normally just a
nuisance. However, |
Cloudiness from
these contaminants will not clear on standing like bubbles will.
Treat with sediment filtration unless there are pathogens in the water - then disinfect and filter.
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Reddish - orange | Iron 1 | Naturally, from soil & rocks, sometimes from galvanized pipes if water is corrosive. | Nuisance | Treatment methods
listed below 1 |
Dark brown to Black | Manganese 1 | Naturally, from soil & rocks | Nuisance | Treatment methods listed below 1 |
Yellow | Tannins (humic acid) | Naturally, from organic soil and vegetation | Nuisance - water may also have a bitter taste | |
Deposits, Spots, & Sediment |
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Water Problem | Contaminant | Source | Health Effect(s) | Treatment(s) |
Soap scum and Bathtub rings. Also, failure of soap to lather well | Calcium and
magnesium carbonate (Hard water) |
Naturally, from soil & rocks | Standard water softener ion exchange. | |
Scaly, whitish deposit on fixtures, plumbing lined with scale. | Calcium and
magnesium carbonate (Hard water) |
Naturally, from soil & rocks |
Standard water softener ion exchange. |
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Spots on clothing | Calcium and
magnesium carbonate (Hard water) |
Naturally, from soil & rocks | ||
Spots on dishes, glassware, and flatware | Calcium and
magnesium carbonate (Hard water) |
Naturally, from soil & rocks | ||
High levels of Total
Dissolved Solids (TDS) 2
(also hard water) |
natural sources
or from human contamination |
TDS can be a mix of many chemicals. 2 |
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Spotting, mottling, or pitting of teeth | Fluoride | Naturally from
soil & rocks
Fluoride can also be added by water treatment companies. |
At about 1 mg/l Fluoride helps prevent tooth decay. Above about 3 - 4 mg/l Fluoride can cause staining of the tooth enamel and other problems. | |
Red - brown or black - brown slime in plumbing system | Iron or Manganese Bacteria | The bacteria feed on iron or manganese dissolved in the water | Nuisance - can clog plumbing and filters | Chlorine or permanganate treatment of well |
Reddish - brown sediment. Typically clears after running the water for a few minutes | Iron | Dissolved iron precipitates when oxygen reaches it. Sometimes the iron sediment in the distribution system or home pipes is disturbed - when this happens, the water can get really "thick" with sediment for a while. | Nuisance | |
Grittiness, abrasiveness of water, and sediments at the bottom of tubs and sinks | Fine sand, grit | Sand or very fine sediments that gets through the filtering screens in wells or resists the coagulation stage during water treatment. | Nuisance | Sedimentation or Sediment Filter |
Staining |
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Water Problem | Contaminant | Source | Health Effect(s) | Treatment(s) |
Blue-green stains on sink and porcelain fixtures | Copper or brass | Much of copper
contamination comes from home plumbing and fixtures when the water is corrosive. |
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Brown-red stains, and discolored clothing | Iron | Naturally, from soil & rocks, sometimes from galvanized pipes if water is corrosive. | Mostly a Nuisance - Neurological effects at very high levels | Treatment methods listed below 1 |
Black stains on fixtures and laundry | Manganese | Naturally, from soil & rocks. | Mostly a Nuisance - Neurological effects at very high levels | Treatment methods listed below 1 |
Blackening and pitting of metal sinks and fixtures | Hydrogen sulfide (gas) |
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Gray stains | Aluminum | The primary source of aluminum in drinking water is from the use of aluminum sulfate (alum) as a coagulant in water treatment plants. | Probably just a nusianc. Although there was some concern several years ago that aluminum contributed to Alzheimer's disease, research does not seem to have supported that idea. | Reverse osmosis or Distillation |
Yellow stains on fabrics, china dishes and sinks, fixtures, etc. | Tannins (humic acid) | Naturally, from organic materials in soil and from vegetation | Nuisance - water may also have a bitter taste | |
Taste |
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Water Problem | Contaminant | Source | Health Effect(s) | Treatment(s) |
Alkaline taste (bitter, "soda" taste) | Hydroxides,
Carbonates and Bicarbonates
High pH water |
Nuisance | pH correction using either a neutralizing filter or chemical feed pump to lower the pH - link | |
Metallic taste | Iron, manganese, copper, lead, or other metals | wide range of possible sources, depending on metal |
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Salty, brackish taste and pitting of fixtures. | Sodium, chloride, sulfate, inorganic salts | Sodium salts are present to a greater or lesser degree in all natural waters. | Sodium can cause problems for people with hypertension. Sulfate can cause gastrointestinal problems. |
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Sharp chemical taste or odor, or "oily" consistency | Pesticides or semi-volatile compounds |
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Risk of cancer. Could affect any bodily organ system |
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Odor |
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Water Problem | Contaminant | Source | Health Effect(s) | Treatment(s) |
Chlorine smell (like bleach or swimming pool) | Chlorine, Chloramines | Disinfection chemicals. Some "residual disinfectant" must remain in the water during distribution to prevent reinfection of the water. |
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Detergent smell (foamy water) | Foaming agents, dilute sewage |
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Risk of disease if bacteria are present. Could harm infants. |
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Sweet, perfume odor | Volatile (or semi-volatile) organic compounds like MTBE |
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Smells like fish | Barium, Cadmium | Barium is highly toxic when its soluble salts are ingested | ||
Organic matter | Naturally occurring | Nuisance | Activated Carbon Filtration | |
Chloramine | Traces of chlorine and ammonia compounds used for desinfection of wastewater. | Nuisance | Activated Carbon Filtration | |
Smells like rotten eggs |
Hydrogen
sulfide |
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Oil or gas smell | Methane | Wells that contain methane are generally located in areas where gas and oil wells are common sights | Aerate water prior to use. The aerator must be vented to the open air to permit the gas to escape into the atmosphere. | |
Gasoline or semi-volatile organic compounds |
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Smells like sewage | Selenium | The concentration found in drinking water is usually low, and comes from natural sources. | ||
Sewage | Leakage from a septic system, waste treatment plant, feed lot, farmyard, etc. | |||
Musty, earthy smell | Decaying Organic matter (leaves, algae) | Naturally occurring, usually in surface or shallow wells | Nuisance, usually |
Iron and Manganese
- In wells where oxygen content is low, the water containing iron &
manganese is clear and colorless because the iron and manganese are dissolved.
Water from the tap may be clear at first, but when exposed to air, iron and
manganese are oxidized and change from the colorless, dissolved forms to
colored, solid forms. Iron precipitates as red-brown particles: the larger
particles settle out of the water, but smaller particles may remain suspended
and give the water a red tint. Manganese forms a black precipitate or
black tint to the water.
Iron and manganese can affect the flavor and color of food
and water. They may react with tannins in coffee, tea, and some alcoholic
beverages to produce a black sludge, which negatively affects both taste and appearance.
Iron will cause reddish-brown staining of laundry,
porcelain, dishes, utensils and even glassware. Manganese acts in a similar way
but causes a brownish-black stain. Soaps and detergents do not remove these
stains, and use of chlorine bleach and alkaline builders (such as sodium and
carbonate) may intensify the stains.
Iron
precipitates can cause problems if they
build up in pipelines, pressure tanks, water heaters or water softeners.
A secondary problem that often results from dissolved iron
or manganese in water is iron or manganese bacteria. These nonpathogenic (not
health threatening) bacteria occur in soil, shallow aquifers and some surface
waters. The bacteria feed on iron and manganese in water. These bacteria form
red-brown (iron) or black-brown (manganese) slime in toilet tanks and can clog
water systems.
Treatment methods for iron and
manganese contamination are discussed in detail at the NebGuide listed below:
Whole House Treatments - the link
below describes these techniques in detail.
(1) phosphate compounds;
(2) ion exchange water softeners;
(3) oxidizing filters;
(4) aeration (pressure type) followed by filtration; and
(5) chemical oxidation followed by filtration.
Point of Use Treatments
Since problems with iron and manganese are aesthetic and nuisances (affecting
water throughout the house rather than health hazards), it makes more sense to
use a whole house water treatment system if you have this problem.
Distillation and reverse osmosis will also remove these contaminants from water
used for drinking and cooking.
The NebGuide, Drinking
Water: Iron and Manganese, has a wealth of additional information about this
problem.
TDS (Total Dissolved Solids) - TDS is a measure of all inorganic and organic substances dissolved in water. It is used to indicate an increase in one or more contaminants. Natural or human-caused activity such as mining or drilling may disturb the water-bearing formation and cause more materials to dissolve in water. Heavily salted roads, improperly lined landfills, junk yards, industrial activities, or chemical spills also may lead to increased TDS concentrations. TDS values above 1,000 ppm indicate problems. Further testing usually is required to pinpoint the exact problem. High TDS may result in offensive odors, tastes, colors and health problems depending on the specific contaminant(s) present.
![]() Copyright © 2005 Randy Johnson. All rights reserved. |
Updated September 2014 |