Hi,
Is this the dissolved oxygen project you were referring to?
https://www.sciencebuddies.org/science- ... p014.shtml
This is a very good project. Perhaps you could collect water samples over a specific geographic region, or perhaps compare the oxygen in the water source and the treated water that is diverted for home use. Do you think that dissolved oxygen is an issue for your local water supply?
Water that is cloudy and tastes bad is definitely a good problem for a science fair project. Here are some non-scientific sources that give more details of the possible sources of off-taste for science project.
https://lawrenceks.org/assets/utilities ... hetics.pdf
http://www.superterry.com/water-tastes- ... smell-bad/
Can you contact your local water company and ask them what the problem might be due to? You may need to measure hydrogen sulfide, chlorine, or heavy metals in the water. If the problem is algae contamination, you would need to find out how to measure this.
Measuring water turbidity is a standard test that is always done on water quality testing. Here are two methods for measuring turbidity:
http://www.who.int/water_sanitation_hea ... fs2_33.pdf
I recommend that you continue to do more background reading. Try to find scientific references if you can. Do a literature search and find out if anyone has published any results on your local water supply. The local water company should have a lot of data available. Look at a map of the rivers and see if there is any obvious industrial source of pollution that could affect water quality.
When you call the local water company, tell them that you are a high school student working on a science project and that you would like to talk to someone who is knowledgeable about the local water supply.
Gather as much information as possible so that whatever project you select, it will be relevant and will contribute to the knowledge on the subject. Try to identify a specific problem that you can investigate.
All of the topics here (dissolved oxygen, chloride, turbidity, etc.) are ideal for a science project because these are parameters that can be measured. You will have one independent variable, which will probably be the source of the water, and one or more dependent variables, which will be the parameter(s) that you are measuring.
Don't worry about all of the results being the same; if you do a good job in your background research and identify a specific problem to investigate, this won't happen
Let me know what you find out about your local water supply.
Donna