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#1
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Hello. I am building a new home. Can someone give me the Pros and
Cons of an Artesian Well & Dug Well? Or if you know a website where I can find that information that would be great. Thanks |
#2
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On 16 May 2006 02:30:37 -0700,
wrote: Hello. I am building a new home. Can someone give me the Pros and Cons of an Artesian Well & Dug Well? Or if you know a website where I can find that information that would be great. Google is your friend... Try it once in awhile... http://ga.water.usgs.gov/edu/gwartesian.html A "dug well" can also be an artesian well... |
#3
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Thanks, but I have already looked at that but I am actually looking for
a comparison of Surface/Shallow/Dug wells to an Artesian. Any ideas? |
#4
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So the water isnt contaminated I would want a deep well.
surface water is too variable |
#5
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replying to Grumman-581, gimmeabreak wrote:
Rude... don't bother "helping" -- for full context, visit http://www.homeownershub.com/mainten...ll-111237-.htm |
#6
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On Monday, October 17, 2016 at 12:44:05 PM UTC-5, gimmeabreak wrote:
replying to Grumman-581, gimmeabreak wrote: Rude... don't bother "helping" -- You're too late. Karma got Grumman-581 8 years ago. He decided to get a drink from a water hose connected to an artesian well. He didn't know that the water pressure was extremely high and when he turned it on, water inflated and blew through his alimentary canal. His body exploded but amazingly, the gerbils survived and were found huddled together mourning his passing in a way only gerbils can. It was a real tragedy. (́_̀) [8~{} Uncle Water Monster |
#7
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On Tue, 18 Oct 2016 12:59:35 -0700 (PDT), Uncle Monster
wrote: On Monday, October 17, 2016 at 12:44:05 PM UTC-5, gimmeabreak wrote: replying to Grumman-581, gimmeabreak wrote: Rude... don't bother "helping" -- You're too late. Karma got Grumman-581 8 years ago. He decided to get a drink from a water hose connected to an artesian well. He didn't know that the water pressure was extremely high and when he turned it on, water inflated and blew through his alimentary canal. His body exploded but amazingly, the gerbils survived and were found huddled together mourning his passing in a way only gerbils can. It was a real tragedy. (??_??) [8~{} Uncle Water Monster I often wondered what happened to that guy. |
#8
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not sure what you mean by artesian well. around here, it is a well
where the water comes to the surface naturally. only occurs on very specific sites. also in minnesota, the health department regulates wells. i believe shallow wells aren't even legal, since they draw on shallow groundwater which can be contaminated. (i believe they have to be at least 50' deep). |
#9
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On 16 May 2006 04:14:28 -0700, "marson" wrote:
not sure what you mean by artesian well. around here, it is a well where the water comes to the surface naturally. only occurs on very specific sites. also in minnesota, the health department regulates wells. i believe shallow wells aren't even legal, since they draw on shallow groundwater which can be contaminated. (i believe they have to be at least 50' deep). Same here. Artesian wells flow freely without a pump. They are not necessarily shallow though. The source could be several hundred feet underground and comes to the surface due to fractures in the bedrock. |
#10
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marson wrote:
not sure what you mean by artesian well. around here, it is a well where the water comes to the surface naturally. only occurs on very specific sites. also in minnesota, the health department regulates wells. i believe shallow wells aren't even legal, since they draw on shallow groundwater which can be contaminated. (i believe they have to be at least 50' deep). In many areas, but not all, of the country, artesian wells are water wells that have pressure behind them. A pump may or may not be required, although one is usually installed to get the flow rate and pressure high enough for typical household use. For instance much of Southeast texas sits on an aquifer, an artesian source. To tap into the aquifer, wells must be dug to a minimum of 250 ft, and to be safe, 300 feet |
#11
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Hi. Here in Newfoundland, Canada and Artesian well is drilled down at
usually around 200', a casing is put in the drilled hole and water is pushed up through the ground using a pump in most cases. marson wrote: not sure what you mean by artesian well. around here, it is a well where the water comes to the surface naturally. only occurs on very specific sites. also in minnesota, the health department regulates wells. i believe shallow wells aren't even legal, since they draw on shallow groundwater which can be contaminated. (i believe they have to be at least 50' deep). |
#12
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#13
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#14
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#15
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Grumman-581 wrote:
On 16 May 2006 04:42:20 -0700, wrote: Hi. Here in Newfoundland, Canada and Artesian well is drilled down at usually around 200', a casing is put in the drilled hole and water is pushed up through the ground using a pump in most cases. If it is pumped, it is not an artesian well... An artesian well can be drilled or natural, but the key ingredient is that it must be under enough natural pressure for the water to come to the surface on its own... Poor definition. According to the US Geological Survey, any subsurface water that is under pressure underground is artesian, even if the pressure is not strong enough to cause the water to flow to the surface. The artesian surface needs only to be moderately above the confining rock layer in order to be classified as artesian. Wells in Brunswick Georgia in the 1880s were so strongly artesian that they could supply multistory buildings without pumping, however today, almost all of these wells require pumping to get the water to the surface as there has been so much depletion of the aquifer. |
#16
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#17
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drilled wells can be artesian wells if a well is drilled to a 300 ft
depth and the static water level is at 200 feet it is a artesian well the water is pressurized enough to bring it up to 200 ft. a well that has water running out the top is a flowing artesian just my 2 cents scott |
#18
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... drilled wells can be artesian wells if a well is drilled to a 300 ft depth and the static water level is at 200 feet it is a artesian well the water is pressurized enough to bring it up to 200 ft. a well that has water running out the top is a flowing artesian just my 2 cents scott A little history. Wife's grandfather (lived outside of Fedora, SD, not too far from Artesian, SD) told me that they tapped into a flowing Artesian well for the old homestead. Water came out of the ground on its' own, flowed through the house, out to the barn, then into a cattle tank outside and then overflowed onto the ground. He said the belief was that if you ever shut the water off, it would divert to another outlet and then you wouldn't have water anymore. Of course they were wrong and eventually they ran off enough water to lower the pressure until the water quit running altogether. When we used to visit while he was alive, they had a drilled well ( I think he said 700' deep) that had the nastiest water you ever tasted. Smelled like rotten eggs, tasted like rotten eggs, and gave you the scoots better than ExLax. We brought bottled water but some cousins from Washington state would bring KoolAid to add to the water so they could drink it. He used to laugh because he said they never did figure out why they still got the scoots. He was quite the gentleman...lived to 103 and to talk to him, you would think you were talking to George Burns' twin brother. Tom G. |
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