Different Types Of WaterWater Terms & DefinitionsPage 1: Letters A ~ EConsumers in the United States drink more bottled water every year: consumption of has risen from 18.7 gallons per capita in 2001 to 26.1 gallons in 2005, according to the Beverage Marketing Corp., which tracks beverage sales and trends. Americans now drinking more bottled water than any other beverage except soft drinks. Click on a letter to go to the appropriate glossary section: a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z This glossary is protected by copyright and cannot be copied in whole or in part. You are welcome to link to it. AQUIFERAn underground layer of water-bearing permeable rock, or permeable mixtures of unconsolidated materials like gravel, sand, silt, or clay. ARTESIAN AQUIFERAn artesian aquifer is a confined aquifer whose water is pressurized. Water will thus flow out of an artesian well without pumping. Artesian wells are named after the former province of Artois in France, where the first one was drilled by Carthusian monks in 1126. ARTESIAN WATERWell water from an artesian aquifer, a water-bearing underground layer of rock or sand in which the water level stands above the top of the aquifer. Fiji is an artesian water. BAINEOTHERAPYThe treatment of illness by bathing and the drinking of waters, including including spa treatments such as hot baths, natural vapor baths, mud baths and other applications. The benefit comes from the rich mineral content in particular spa waters that are present in high enough quantities to exert a therapeutic influence, such as arsenic, bromine, iodine, lithium, manganese, potassium, radium, selenium, silica, and sulfur, which can be absorbed through the skin. BOTTLED WATERDrinking water, usually spring water or mineral water but also distilled water, sold in a sealed, portable bottles. The International Bottled Water Association (IBWA) defines bottled water as water sealed in a sanitary container, to be sold for human consumption. This definition includes flavored, carbonated and non-carbonated waters. According to the Beverage Marketing Corporation, bottled water consumption in the U.S. has surpassed that of milk, coffee, and beer. CARBONATIONCarbonation occurs when carbon dioxide is dissolved in water. Water and gaseous carbon dioxide react to form a dilute solution of carbonic acid. This process generates the “fizz” in carbonated water and sparkling mineral water (also the head to beer and the cork pop and bubbles to champagne and sparkling wine). Carbonation occurs naturally, e.g. when underground carbon dioxide carbonates well water; or it can be done artificially, by dissolving carbon dioxide under pressure into water. Club soda and seltzer are forms carbonated water made artificially from tap water. Effervescent (sparkling) mineral water is also carbonated water. CARBONIC ACIDThe combination of water and gaseous carbon dioxide that generates the effervescence in carbonated (sparkling) water. CARBONATED WATER or SODA WATERWater treated with carbon dioxide to make it bubbly. These are bottled tap waters that are enhanced by carbonation. In the U.S., carbonated water was known as soda water until after World War II, due to the sodium salts it contained. While today we think of “soda” as a carbonated beverage, the word originally refers to a chemical salts, also called carbonate of soda (sodium carbonate, sodium hydroxide, sodium monoxide). The salts were added as flavoring and acidity regulator, to mimic the taste of a natural mineral water. After the war, terms such as sparkling water and seltzer water gained favor. Except for sparkling mineral water, all carbonated water/soda water is made from municipal water supplies (tap water). Carbonated water was invented in Leeds, England in 1767 by British chemist Joseph Priestley, who discovered how to infuse water with carbon dioxide by suspending a bowl of water above a beer vat at a local brewery. Carbonated water changed the way people drank liquor, which had been neat, providing a “mixer” to dilute the alcohol. Types of carbonated water:
DISTILLED WATERPure water free from dissolved salts. Formerly made by distillation, now produced chemically by demineralization. EFFERVESCENTAnother term for sparkling water. Technically, effervescence is the escape of gas from a liquid solution. EPAThe Environmental Protection Agency of the U.S. Issues National Primary Drinking Water Regulations (NPDWRs or primary standards), legally enforceable standards that apply to public water systems. Primary standards protect public health by limiting the levels of contaminants in drinking water. The EPA recommends secondary standards to water systems but does not require systems to comply. |
Last Updated Mar 2021
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