4000 years ago, in India,
Hindus devised the first drinking water standards. Hindus heated dirty water by boiling it and exposing it to sunlight or dipping it seven times in hot pieces of copper, then filtering it through earthen vessels and cooling it. This was a procedure to obtain sterilized drinking water as well as to keep it aesthetically pleasing. This method was directed at individuals and households rather than for use as a community water source. In China, boiling water was found to reduce the spread of disease. To this day, hot water just below boiling point is typically served in Chinese restaurants. The Egyptians reportedly used alum to clarify water as early as 1500 BC. 2,000 years ago,
Mayan drinking water filtration systems used crystalline
quartz and
zeolite. Both minerals are used in modern water filtration. "The filters would have removed harmful microbes, nitrogen-rich compounds, heavy metals such as mercury and other toxins from the water".
Persian engineer Al-Karaji () wrote a book,
The Extraction of Hidden Waters, which gave an early description of a water filtration process. Until the invention of the microscope, the existence of microscopic life was undiscovered. More than 200 years passed before the microscope was invented and the relationship between microorganisms and disease became clear. In the mid-19th century,
cholera was proven to be transmitted by contaminated water. In the late 19th century,
Louis Pasteur's theory of the particulate pathogen finally established a causal relationship between microorganisms and disease. Filtration as a method of water purification was established in the 18th century, and the first municipal water treatment plant was built in Scotland in 1832. However, the aesthetic value of water was important at the time, and effective water quality standards did not exist until the late 19th century. During the 19th and 20th centuries, water filters for domestic water production were generally divided into
slow sand filters and
rapid sand filters (also called mechanical filters and American filters). While there were many small-scale water filtration systems prior to 1800,
Paisley, Scotland is generally acknowledged as the first city to receive filtered water for an entire town. The Paisley filter began operation in 1804 and was an early type of slow sand filter. Throughout the 1800s, hundreds of slow sand filters were constructed in the UK and on the European continent. An intermittent slow sand filter was constructed and operated at
Lawrence, Massachusetts in 1893 due to continuing
typhoid fever epidemics caused by sewage contamination of the water supply. The first continuously operating slow sand filter was designed by
Allen Hazen for the city of
Albany, New York in 1897. The most comprehensive history of water filtration was published by
Moses N. Baker in 1948 and reprinted in 1981. In 1924,
John R. Baylis developed a fixed grid backwash assist system, which consisted of pipes with nozzles that injected jets of water into the filter material during expansion. ==See also==