Canals are notorious for being filled with industrial toxins, mud, tar and other forms of sewage that may potentially take years to clean up. The Gowanus Canal in Brooklyn is no exception, and to clean the 300,000 cubic yards of miscellaneous sludge is expected to take the Environmental Protection Agency the better part of a decade. But what is to be done with this muck once it is all collected? Well, according to Popular Mechanics, one method the EPA is considering is to melt the ooze and mold it into washing-machine-sized glass cubes. Utilizing a process known as vitrification, the toxic sludge is put into metal molds and then heated up to very high temperatures. If there is enough sand in the material, which in this case is quite likely, the result will be transparent blocks that can then be used in construction or sculptures.
Gowanus Canal Sludge Could be Turned into Glass Building Blocks
by Timon Singh, 09/10/10
filed under: Recycled Materials
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Why waste large amounts of taxpayer funds researching technologies which have already been tested. Go to the Sydney Tar Ponds Agency website (www.tarpondscleanup.ca), archived reports, \”Technology Demonstration Report\” October 2002. Test results and costs are provided.
Dear
we have her in north of iraq some natural phosforic water sources we would like to make some swimpools and fretime park if you have beter idea how to make from this sources agood project please contact me
grate thanks
Hadi