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Boiling water for safety.
No, you are only concentrating the heavy metals, neurotoxins and the salt in the water.
You need way more context about what you are trying to eliminate from your water to do it safely.
Boiling water renders it biologically safe. No giardiosis, etc...
If you are drinking water with significant heavy metals, concentrating by evaporating a few cups when boiling a gallon, isn't your problem.
This is dumbest post I have read this year. Congratulations.
The dumbest post this year, so far.
That we know of
Trump is still alive and posting on his propaganda platform...give him a day
You're not even concentrating it that much when you boil it. Keep the lid on the pot next time so you lose less to steam and evaporation.
Also, "concentrating it" makes it sound like you're making it worse, but the total amount (mass/moles) stays the same.
Plus if you build a simple condensation setup, boil the whole thing and drink the condensed steam, you're also getting rid of 99%* of those heavy, inorganic impurities
*out-of-my-ass number
I'd like to read a survival guide based on actual locations rather than old boy scout tricks.
If you strand on a deserted island in the year 2026 you will find a heap of plastic bottles and other trash that can be made into a solar powered distillery or desalination device. It might still be full of micro plastics but whatever so is the the bottled water in the grocery store.
Actually if you ever get in a survival situation besides falling off a ship, your best option is probably to rob the nearest grocery store. It's a great resource that can be found in the most desolate places.
If you have an entire grocery store to rob what kind of survival situation are you in? Zombies?
Day to day survival in a lage stage capitalism.
I'd choose the zombie apocalypse and catastrophic events any day. At least that doesn't have the existential dread looming over your every move.
Boiling water that contains cyanotoxins*
Someone doesn't understand how distilled water is made...
Distilling is different from just boiling, in the sort of context we''re talking about you're just getting water up to boiling in a container to kill pathogens, not collecting the steam that evaporates off of it to condense back into water to drink.
And in a lot of survival situations you'd be lucky to have something to boil water with, let alone construct a still.
To their credit, yes, theoretically boiling water will concentrate things like heavy metals. You're just not going to be able to get it hot enough to evaporate stuff like lead or mercury, all of the water will boil off and your pot will melt long before that if you can even reach the sorts of temperatures needed (you probably wouldn't be able to, at least not without constructing some additional infrastructure, and if you're capable of that odds are you're pretty much set for this kind of situation and not need to be reading anything in this thread for advice)
In practice, you're just not going to be boiling water hot or long enough for that to really matter. You really only need to get it up to boiling for an instant then you can take it off the heat (and arguably it's probably safe at some point before it reaches boiling, but unless you have a thermometer, stopwatch, and some tables to consult about pasteurization, it's a lot easier to just watch for a boil.) Go put a few cups of water in a pot on the stove and get it up to boiling, how much did the water level change? Probably not all that much, you're not doing much to concentrate whatever's in there.
You have maybe a week you can go without water under absolutely ideal conditions, more realistically you probably have about 3-5 days, or even a few hours if it's hot and you're exerting yourself. Most toxins you're going to find in water aren't going to kill you in that sort of time frame, they're more likely to be something that will add to your lifetime exposure and bioaccumulation and cause issues for you sometime down the road, maybe years or decades later.
And if the concentration of whatever you're concerned about is high enough to cause more immediate issues, odds are that you're kind of fucked either way, and the tiny bit of concentration that happens from boiling isn't going to be a major factor. You'd probably get sick regardless, you're just trading one issue for another- dying of dehydration in a couple days, or dying of poison in a couple days.
And some more volatile chemicals might evaporate off in the boiling process, let's say that for some reason there's a bunch of acetone in the water (picked that for no other reason than because I happen to be looking at a can of it on a shelf in my basement while I'm writing this) acetone boils at 132.8°f (56c) so by the time the water reaches boiling all or most of that acetone has already evaporated.