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2002 | OriginalPaper | Chapter

Public Health Aspects of Riverbank Filtration

Authors : Rolf A. Deininger, Jiyoung Lee, Arvil Ancheta, Chak Somana

Published in: Riverbank Filtration: Understanding Contaminant Biogeochemistry and Pathogen Removal

Publisher: Springer Netherlands

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The quest for pure water began in prehistoric times. Recorded knowledge of water treatment is found in Sanskrit medical lore and in Egyptian inscriptions. Pictures of apparati to clarify liquids (both water and wine) have been found on Egyptian walls dating back to the fifteenth century B.C. Boiling of water, the use of wick siphons, filtration through porous vessels, and even filtration with sand and gravel, as means to purify water, are methods that have been prescribed for thousands of years. In his writings on public hygiene, Hippocrates (460–354 B.C.) directed attention principally to the importance of water in the maintenance of health, but he also prescribed that rain water should be boiled and strained. The cloth bag that he recommended for straining became known in later times as “Hippocrates’ sleeve.”

Metadata
Title
Public Health Aspects of Riverbank Filtration
Authors
Rolf A. Deininger
Jiyoung Lee
Arvil Ancheta
Chak Somana
Copyright Year
2002
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-010-0479-4_8