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  2. History of fountains in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_fountains_in...

    Fountains built in the United States between 1900 and 1950 mostly followed European models and classical styles. For example: The handsome Samuel Francis Dupont Memorial Fountain (aka Dupont Circle Fountain), in Dupont Circle, Washington D.C., was designed and created by Henry Bacon and Daniel Chester French, the architect and sculptor of the Lincoln Memorial, in 1921, in a pure neoclassical ...

  3. Channeled Scablands - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Channeled_scablands

    Large potholes were formed by swirling vortexes of water called kolks scouring and plucking out the bedrock. [10] The Scablands are littered with large boulders called glacial erratics that rafted on glaciers and were deposited by the glacial outburst flooding. The lithology of erratics usually does not match the rock type that surrounds it, as ...

  4. Drinking fountains in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drinking_fountains_in_the...

    A drinking fountain, also called a water fountain or bubbler, is a fountain designed to provide drinking water. It consists of a basin with either continuously running water or a tap. The drinker bends down to the stream of water and swallows water directly from the stream.

  5. List of prehistoric lakes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_prehistoric_lakes

    Lake Nipissing; 8,400 – 5,500 YBP formed as the water bodies in the Superior and Huron basins merged across Sault Ste. Marie around 8,400 YBP and then merged with the Michigan basin around 7,800. [1] Lake Stanley-Hough; 8,700 YBP, the water levels had risen to connect both Lake Stanley and Lake Hough into a single body of water. [1]

  6. Whirlpool - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whirlpool

    A whirlpool is a body of rotating water produced by opposing currents or a current running into an obstacle. [1] [clarification needed] Small whirlpools form when a bath or a sink is draining. More powerful ones formed in seas or oceans may be called maelstroms (/ ˈ m eɪ l s t r ɒ m,-r ə m / MAYL-strom, -⁠strəm).

  7. Fountain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fountain

    An Egyptian fountain on the Temple of Dendera. Ancient civilizations built stone basins to capture and hold precious drinking water. A carved stone basin, dating to around 700 BC, was discovered in the ruins of the ancient Sumerian city of Lagash in modern Iraq.

  8. Early Lake Erie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_Lake_Erie

    The flood created a channel in the moraines and bedrock lower water level in the Erie basin. [2] The Niagara River Outlet, was over 50 metres (160 ft) lower than the present level of Lake Erie [3] creating a non-glacial lake, called Early Lake Erie. At this stage water elevation was 120 metres (390 ft) above sea level.

  9. Sacred waters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacred_waters

    The Navajo and Hopi people have long embraced the water underneath and around the Black Mesa area as sacred to their people. The people have long lived around and became dependent on springs and wells of the Black Mesa. These waters are the only source of drinking water, water for livestock, and water for agriculture for the Navajo and Hopi people.