Across
- 5. Reducing this is the key to protecting oceans
- 7. RElease waterborne and airborne toxins that damage fisheries, kill birds, reduce tourism, and poison seafood
- 11. This process is used to kill disease-carrying bacteria and some viruses
- 13. "It is a hard truth to swallow, but nature does not care if we live or die. We cannot survive without oceans, for example, but they can do just fine without us."
- 15. Environmentalist who calls for redesigning the sewage treatment system
- 16. Bacteria used in secondary sewage treatment to remove dissolved oxygen-demanding organic wastes
- 17. Processed petroleum products
- 19. More than 150 cities in the U.S. use natural or artificially created these to treat sewage as a lower-cost alternative to expensive waste treatment plants
- 20. According to them, improvements to U.S. households regarding drinking water would cost each household an average of $30 a year
- 21. Oil as it comes out of the ground
Down
- 1. Tanker that released a huge amount of oil and contaminated 1,500 kilometers offshore
- 2. Bear the brunt of the inputs of pollutants and wastes into the ocean
- 3. River's watershed that contains more than half of all U.S. croplands
- 4. Sewage treatment that uses screens and grit tanks to remove large floating objects
- 6. This outbreak infected more than 300,000 people and caused at least 3,500 deaths
- 8. Percent of waste entering the Chesapeake Bay and then flushed into the Atlantic Ocean
- 9. 85% of the sewage from large cities along this sea is discharged into the sea untreated
- 10. By itself, primary treatment removes this percent of suspended solids
- 12. City that is known for its water purity
- 14. Here, households receive a strip of cloth for filtering out cholera-producing bacteria from drinking water
- 18. Percentage that scientists estimate of oil that can ever be cleaned up from a major spill
