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Simple and inexpensive means of filtering arsenic from well water

By Rick Weiss

GMU Teacher's Ingenuity Nets $1 Million Prize

Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, February 2, 2007

A George Mason University chemistry professor has won a $1 million engineering prize for developing a simple and inexpensive means of filtering arsenic from well water, an advance that is already preventing serious health problems in hundreds of thousands of people in his native Bangladesh and could help millions of others around the world.

The 2007 Grainger Challenge Prize for Sustainability, administered by the National Academy of Engineering, will go to Abul Hussam of Centreville, academy officials announced yesterday.

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"Abul
Abul Hussam will receive $1 million for developing a system to filter arsenic out of well water. (Courtesy Abul Hussam - Courtesy Abul Hussam)


    
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