It was way back in 2005 that we commissioned Springhill Interactive Media to build our last website to update our dawn-of-the-web site. Well, after 6 years, that "old" site had become a bit dated....
So we are proud to welcome you to the new-and-improved groundwaterscience.com!
Like the old site, we want this website to serve not only as a digital gateway to our company but also as a legitimate resource about all things pertaining to ground water and wells. So in addition to providing the information that you need to do business with us, we have also included a useful library of additional resources - including our free archive of technical articles and a huge index of categorized weblinks.
This is now the third version of the Ground Water Science website, dating all of the way back to the dawn of the web in 1997. So we hope that you continue to find this site to be useful and engaging.
Thanks for visiting!
Conduct analysis to define biofouling and biocorrosion mechanisms involved in the rapid corrosion of multiple monitoring well casing, potentially compromising critical data on potential chemical and radiological contamination of ground water. Ground Water Science supplied project scope, an on-site laboratory capability (with no outside inputs or transport out) to analyze for microbial contributors to biocorrosion, documentation of evidence of biocorrosion from pulled well components, and definition of a method to measure corrosion potentials between inner and outer casings through grout. Project conducted on a very rapid time scale.
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“We learn the value of water when the well goes dry,” said Benjamin Franklin. The cost of properly maintaining your ground water assets pales in comparison to the social and economic disaster that would result from a failed community water supply.