Atlanta, Ga Paper - Notes on the Underground Supplies of Potable Waters in the South Atlantic Piedmont Plateau

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 8
- File Size:
- 357 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1896
Abstract
It is a fact that is coming to be more widely recognized by the general public, as well as by members of the medical fraternity, that the health of persons living in our hill-country depends in no small degree upon the drinking water obtained, just as it has been found that the* use of pure water in the lowlands and swamp-areas of the Southern States results in practical immunity from malarial diseases. Hence the problem, how to obtain supplies of wholesome water for the towns and manufacturing establishments in the hill-country or Piedmont plateau-region of the Southeastern States, becomes one of considerable interest, the importance of which will continue to increase, as the favorable conditions for manufactures and agriculture in this region will make it, in the near future, the most thickly populated portion of the South Atlantic States. Water-supplies from Surface-streams are unquestionably of the first importance; and in the mountain counties, where the region is still largely forest-covered and the streams are swift and continually aerated by rapids and cascades, the water is of superior purity and clearness. This statement is also applicable to the more elevated and sparsely settled portions of the Piedmont plateau; but in the less hilly and more thickly settled portions of this region the streams are more sluggish, and the waters more muddy and less pure, owing to the fact that a much larger proportion of the surface is under cultivation.
Citation
APA:
(1896) Atlanta, Ga Paper - Notes on the Underground Supplies of Potable Waters in the South Atlantic Piedmont PlateauMLA: Atlanta, Ga Paper - Notes on the Underground Supplies of Potable Waters in the South Atlantic Piedmont Plateau. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1896.