Sources of Pollution
| English | Chinese | Pinyin |
|---|---|---|
| point source | 点源 | diǎn yuán |
| nonpoint source | 非点源 | fēi diǎn yuán |
Where pollution comes from
- To clean up pollution, first find where it comes from.
- Some pollution pours from one clear spot.
- Some seeps in from everywhere at once.
- Scientists split sources into two types.
Point sources
- A point source 点源 comes from one identifiable spot.
- A factory's discharge pipe is a point source.
- So is a single sewage outfall or one oil spill.
- You can point to it on a map — hence the name.
A point source of pollution is…
A point source comes from one clear location — a factory pipe, a smokestack, a single spill.
Nonpoint sources
- A nonpoint source 非点源 is spread out and diffuse.
- Rain washing fertilizer off many farms is nonpoint.
- So is oil and grime rinsed from every city street.
- There is no single pipe — it comes from the whole landscape.
Point source or nonpoint source?
Sort each pollution source by whether it comes from one spot or many spread-out places.
A nonpoint source is harder to control because it…
A nonpoint source is diffuse — runoff from many farms or streets — so there is no single pipe to plug.
Rain washing pollutants off fields and roads into rivers is called ____.
Runoff carries diffuse pollutants off the land — the classic nonpoint source.
Why the difference matters
- A point source is easier to control — filter or plug one pipe.
- A nonpoint source is much harder — you cannot filter a whole region.
- Nonpoint pollution is now the bigger water-quality problem.
- Fixing it means changing how we farm, drive, and build across the land.
Point sources are usually easier to control than nonpoint sources.
You can put a filter on one pipe; you cannot easily filter runoff from a whole countryside.
Select all point sources of pollution.
A pipe, an outfall, and a single spill are all point sources. Runoff from many farms is nonpoint.
The test is simple: can you point to one spot on a map? A pipe, an outfall, a spill — point source. If instead it's washing off everywhere — farms, lawns, roads, parking lots — it's a nonpoint source. The distinction matters because point sources can be regulated at the pipe, while nonpoint pollution has no single pipe to control.
Two polluted rivers:
- In one, a factory's pipe pours chemicals straight into the water — a point source you can find, measure, and order shut.
- In the other, no single pipe is to blame: fertilizer from a hundred farms and oil from every road wash in with the rain — a nonpoint source that no single fix can stop.
Pollution sources are point or nonpoint. A point source comes from one identifiable spot (a pipe, an outfall, a spill) and is easier to control. A nonpoint source is diffuse — runoff from many farms, streets, and lawns — and is much harder to fix because there is no single pipe to plug.