Cover Image: November 2012 Scientific American Magazine See Inside

Recommended: Drinking Water















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Image: Overlook Press

Drinking Water: A History
by James Salzman
Overlook Press, 2012 (($27.95))

Salzman's account of drinking water makes the liquid seem as mythic as the fountain of youth. He explores the engineering, politics and health implications surrounding humans' quest for water, as well as the toxins and changing climate that threaten our supply. The history includes how physician John Snow methodically traced an 1854 cholera outbreak to a single water pump in London, New York City's evolution from a disease-ridden metropolis to one that boasts about its tap water, and the innovative technologies that may avert global water poverty.

COMMENT AT ScientificAmerican.com/nov2012



This article was originally published with the title Drinking Water.



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  1. 1. greenhome123 10:49 PM 10/26/12

    I believe solar powered atmospheric water generators will provide a large percentage of drinking water to humans in the future.

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