Physics, asked by arshitharagu, 6 days ago

What you do: Activity: How I use water Note: Do this activity on a Sunday and a weekday. What you need: Paper, pencil, and a plastic bottle of capacity I litre 2.

Observe the amount of water you use and fill this information in a table as shown below. b. You will need to keep a careful written account of how you use water throughout the day. This includes c. You can use the 1 litre bottle to estimate personal use of water, and ask your family to use it to water used for cleaning yourself, drinking, cooking food, and other household purposes, estimate the water used for cooking. d. At the end of the day, have a discussion with your family, and then fill in the last column​

Answers

Answered by vishannu05
1

Answer:

Minnesota logo Minnesota Department of Health

Drinking Water Protection

Drinking Water Protection Home

About Us

A-Z List of Contaminants in Water

Community Public Water Supply

Drinking Water Institute

Drinking Water Revolving Fund

Noncommunity Public Water Supply

Source Water Protection

Water Operator and Certification Training

DWP Contacts

Related Topics

Annual Reports

Drinking Water Risk Communication Toolkit

Fact Sheets

Forms

Invisible Heroes Videos: Minnesota's Drinking Water Providers

Noncom Notes Newsletter

Sample Collection Procedures (videos, pictures, written instructions)

Waterline Newsletter

Related Sites

10 States Standards

Clean Water Fund

Health Risk Assessment – Guidance Values and Standards for Water

Minnesota Well Index

Water and Health

Wells and Borings

Environmental Health Division

EH Division Home

Questions?

Contact the Drinking Water Protection Program: health.drinkingwater

@state.mn.us

or 651-201-4700

Open Menu

Bottled Water: Questions and Answers

This information sheet, Bottled Water: Questions and Answers (PDF), answers common questions about bottled water. Bottled water is water sealed in a bottle or other container. Note that bottled water is different from vended water, which comes from a machine that dispenses water into a container.

Bottled Water: Questions and Answers information sheet

by language:

Amharic (PDF) | Arabic (PDF) | Chinese (PDF) | French (PDF) | Hmong (PDF) | Karen (PDF) | Khmer (PDF) | Lao (PDF) | Oromo (PDF) | Russian (PDF) | Somali (PDF) | Spanish (PDF) | Vietnamese (PDF)

Is bottled water safer than tap water?

There is no reason to believe that bottled water is safer than tap water. Tap water and bottled water generally have the same quality standards.

How do tap water and bottled water regulations compare?

Tap water from public water systems is regulated by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) under the Safe Drinking Water Act. The Minnesota Department of Health (MDH) regularly tests public tap water for safety. The EPA requires the results of this testing to be made available to the public. The EPA also requires information about potential health effects of drinking water contaminants, the source of the water, and compliance with regulations to be made public.

Bottled water is regulated as a food product by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The FDA does not require bottled water companies to use certified laboratories for water quality testing or to report test results. The FDA does require bottled water labels to list ingredients and nutritional information.

Explanation:

i hope i help you

please make me brailist answer

this is correct

i spend 15 minutes for you

Similar questions