For anyone who has ever studied the patterns of erosion they know that the debris from rivers and water flows typically brings all the excess material into one location and therefore the congregation of materials is the perfect place to start if you wish to remove the debris chain. Now then, when considering strategies in the abatement of the congregation of materials, pollution, compounds and or chemicals from the environment we must consider the clustering of pollution.
One could say that maybe the abatement and congregation of materials need to be studied prior to the use of any abatement chemicals to insure that the chemicals are properly used in the right amounts and only on the clustered areas that are problematic to the situation. By properly studying this in advance we can save ourselves time and hassles and prevent excess usage of chemicals, which will mitigate any possibility of unintended consequences.
It seems all to often abatement professionals go for the carpet-bombing or “nuke it” approach and this causes problems because chemicals are over used where they are not needed and not enough of the abatement chemical gets to the debris clusters where it is most needed. Perhaps you can see how much more efficient we really could be when abating insects, pollution or unwanted compounds. Consider this in 2006.
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