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World
12/06/97 - 1294
Potency Of The Ganges
India (VNN) - Science Frontiers recently published a story on the cleansing
powers of the Ganges:
The Ganges is 2525 kilometers long. Along its course, 27 major
towns dump 902 million liters of sewage into it each day.
Added to this are all those human bodies consigned to this holy
river, called the Ganga by the Indians. Despite this heavy burden
of pollutants, the Ganges has for millennia been regarded as incorruptible.
How can this be?
Several foreigners have recorded the effects of this river's "magical"
cleansing properties:
1.Ganges water does not putrefy, even after long periods of storage.
River water begins to putrefy when lack of oxygen promotes the
growth of anaerobic bacteria, which produce the tell-tale smell
of stale water.
2.British physician, C.E. Nelson, observed that Ganga water taken
from the Hooghly---one of its dirtiest mouths---by ships returning
to England remained fresh throughout the voyage.
3.In 1896, the British physician E. Hanbury Hankin reported in
the French journal Annales de l'Institut Pasteur that cholera
microbes died within three hours in Ganga water, but continued
to thrive in distilled water even after 48 hours.
4.A French scientist, Monsieur Herelle, was amazed to find "that
only a few feet below the bodies of persons floating in the Ganga
who had died of dysentery and cholera, where one would expect
millions of germs, there were no germs at all.
More recently, D.S. Bhargava, an Indian environmental engineer
measured the Ganges' remarkable self-cleansing properties:
"Bhargava's calculations, taken from an exhaustive three-year
study of the Ganga, show that it is able to reduce BOD [biochemical
oxygen demand] levels much faster than in other rivers."
Quantitatively, the Ganges seems to clean up suspended wastes
15 to 20 times faster than other rivers.
(Kalshian, Rakesh; "Ganges Has Magical Cleaning Properties," Geographic,
66:5, April 1994.)
From Science Frontiers #94, JUL-AUG 1994. © 1997 William R. Corliss
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