ATLANTA (PRNewswire) -- As water well levels continue to drop this summer, levels of contamination in groundwater can become more concentrated, leading to potential health risks for more than one-third of Americans who depend on private wells for drinking water.
Because drought has heavily affected parts of the United States that have high levels of naturally occurring arsenic in their groundwater, users of well water in Arizona, Idaho, Montana, South Dakota and Utah should take extra precautions to make sure their water is safe, agencies warn. For these wells, lead, iron, bacteria and salinity levels may also rise.
Public utilities which own wells and private well owners should check the levels of certain contaminants when the water levels are low, according to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Although the EPA does not regulate private wells, owners can assure water is safe from drought-related concentration of contaminants using the testing guidelines found on its web site, .
For more information on the filtration media:
For more information on drought in general:
- National Drought Mitigation Center -- http://enso.unl.edu/ndmc/index.html
- U.S. Geological Survey Drought Watch -- http://md.water.usgs.gov/drought/us.html.