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artesian well
noun
- a well in which water rises under pressure from a permeable stratum overlaid by impermeable rock.
artesian well
/ ɑːˈtiːzɪən; -ʒən /
noun
- a well sunk through impermeable strata into strata receiving water from an area at a higher altitude than that of the well, so that there is sufficient pressure to force water to flow upwards
artesian well
/ är-tē′zhən /
- A deep well that passes through impermeable rock or sediment and reaches water that is held under pressure in a confined aquifer. In aquifers of this type, the water in the lower regions is trapped between two layers of impermeable rock and cannot rise to the level of the water table in the upper, unconfined regions. When a well penetrates the confined region, the pressure forces the water to rise within the well until it reaches the elevation of the water table in the unconfined region (a level known as the potentiometric surface).
- ◆ In a flowing artesian well the water is under enough pressure to rise all the way to the surface without being pumped and must be capped to control the flow.
Word History and Origins
Origin of artesian well1
Word History and Origins
Origin of artesian well1
Example Sentences
What is clear, in each case, is that the tears are coming from an extremely deep place, like the purest artesian well water.
Then there was the pumping plant for the artesian well, and the big cement tank where Judge Miller’s boys took their morning plunge and kept cool in the hot afternoon.
In 1908, the Southwestern Immigration and Development Company published a brochure advertising 3,000 lots for sale in a town of paved roads, tree-lined streets and handsome buildings, supplied with water from an artesian well.
The Gary one is northwest Indiana’s only artesian well.
A further sign of luxury and wealth, they had two bathrooms with running water pumped from an artesian well.
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