News

Where old ideas fuel modern solutions

1. United States

A home water treatment using Navajo pottery combines novel engineering with Native American knowledge. After decades of commercial mining in the area, much of the Navajo Nation in the Southwest lacks access to clean drinking water. So scientists from the University of Texas at Austin partnered with a third-generation Navajo potter, Deanna Tso, to create a solution that combines locally sourced pine resin with silver nanoparticles for purification.

While silver is often used in ceramic water filters due to its antimicrobial properties, some filters can quickly lose their effectiveness as silver particles degrade. By incorporating pine resin, a material commonly used as a glaze by Navajo potters, that degradation can be remediated.  

Why We Wrote This

From “ice stupas” in India to water purification systems for members of the Navajo Nation in the United States, modern solutions to water woes are drawing inspiration from local artistic traditions. A progress roundup.

Each pot cost less than $10 to create, making it a potentially low-cost solution for those without access to clean water. The lab hopes to develop other technologies for Indigenous communities in Alaska, southern Mexico, and Bangladesh.

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