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Spring Run-off
Water is
generally classified into two groups: surface water and groundwater.
In general:
Groundwater is located underground in large aquifers and must be pumped out of
the ground after drilling a deep well.
Surface water
is found in lakes, rivers and streams and is drawn into the public water supply
by an intake.
Surface water
is just what the name implies; it is water found in a river, lake or other
surface cavity.
This water is
usually not very high in mineral content, and is often called “soft water” even
though it is probably not.
Surface water
is exposed to many different contaminants, such as animal wastes, pesticides,
insecticides, industrial wastes, algae and many other organic materials.
Even surface
water found in what seems like pristine mountain streams can be contaminated by
wild animal waste, dead animals upstream or other decay.
Groundwater is
water contained in or by a subsurface layer of soil or rock.
There are many
sources recharging the supply of groundwater, including rain that soaks into
the ground, rivers that disappear underground and melting snow.
Because of the
many sources of recharge, groundwater may contain any or all of the
contaminants found in surface water as well as the dissolved minerals it picks
up underground.
However, groundwater
commonly contains less contamination than surface water because the rock tends
to act as a filter to remove some contaminants.
Imagine that
rain falls and the rainwater soaks into the ground.
The plants use
as many nutrients as they can and then the water continues to filter down
through clay, sand and porous rock filtering the water much like a charcoal
filter might clean your drinking water at home.
Eventually this
groundwater finds a home in an aquifer or trapped between levels of rock creating
a water table. This is the water you most often drink from your well.
Due to the
minerals picked up while filtering through the rocks, groundwater is typically
considered to be “hard” water.
As a
leading global technology company, Xylem is committed to finding solutions to
the world's most critical water challenges.
Put
simply, Xylem is working to solve water.
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