Spring (hydrosphere)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- For other meanings of the term, see Spring (disambiguation).
A spring is a point where groundwater flows out of the ground, and is thus where the aquifer surface meets the ground surface. Dependent upon the constancy of the water source (rainfall or snowmelt that infiltrates the earth), a spring may be ephemeral (intermittent) or perennial (continuous). Water issuing from an artesian spring rises to a higher elevation than the top of the confined aquifer from which it issues. When water issues from the ground it may form into a pool or flow downhill, in surface streams. Sometimes a spring is termed a seep.
Minerals become dissolved in the water as it moves through the underground rocks. This gives the water flavour and even carbon dioxide bubbles, depending upon the nature of the geology through which it passes. This is why spring water is often bottled and sold as mineral water, although the term is often the subject of deceptive advertising. Springs that contain significant amounts of minerals are sometimes called 'mineral springs'. Springs that contain large amounts of dissolved sodium salts, mostly sodium carbonate, are called 'soda springs'.
Water emanating from karst topography should not be confused with spring water, since part of it is likely to originate from watercourses that may have found its way through the ground from a sinkhole in the surface at a higher altitude. In such cases, it will not have been subjected to as great a degree of ground filtering as spring water, which has continuously passed through a porous aquifer.
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[edit] Classification
Springs are often classified by the volume of the water they discharge. The largest springs are called "first-magnitude," defined as springs that discharge water at a rate of at least 100 cubic feet per second (2800 L/s). The scale for spring flow is as follows:
| Magnitude | Flow (ft³/s, gal/min, pint/min) | Flow (L/s) |
|---|---|---|
| 1st Magnitude | > 100 ft³/s | 2800 L/s |
| 2nd Magnitude | 10 to 100 ft³/s | 280 to 2800 L/s |
| 3rd Magnitude | 1 to 10 ft³/s | 28 to 280 L/s |
| 4th Magnitude | 100 US gal/min<ref>gallons per minute</ref> to 1 ft³/s <ref> or 448 US gal/min</ref> | 6.3 to 28 L/s |
| 5th Magnitude | 10 to 100 gal/min | 0.63 to 6.3 L/s |
| 6th Magnitude | 1 to 10 gal/min | 63 to 630 mL/s |
| 7th Magnitude | 1 pint to 1 gal/min | 8 to 63 mL/s |
| 8th Magnitude | Less than 1 pint/min | 8 mL/s |
| 0 Magnitude | no flow (sites of past/historic flow) |
[edit] Notes
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[edit] See also
</div>[edit] External links
- "The Science of Springs" (via Wayback Machine)
- "What Is A Spring?"
- List of First-Magnitude springs in Floridaar:ينبوع
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