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Zamzam Water.

StopS

Member
But aren't many bottled waters taken straight from the spring, with no processing?
There is no water without processing coming from the well. If you go to the page of the "Zamzam Studies and Research Centre" they show you what they do and how they store the water.
 

Aupmanyav

Be your own guru
Interesting theory. Then it would be a reserve used for like 1,437 years by now. Even since then, this area was a barren land. I think this is still too long to have that reserve not depleted by now.
"These channels, buried 60 metres below the ground, were believed to be the route traced by the river Saraswati. The RGWD (Rajasthan Ground Water Development Authority) was clear about what it set out to do. Once these channels were retraced, and the sequence of the river flow established, it would go a long way in solving the water problem in arid Rajasthan. The theory was that these channels could transport surplus water from Punjab and Haryana during the monsoons, and store it for future use."
http://www.downtoearth.org.in/coverage/saraswati-underground-15455

"Mr KS Sriwastawa of the Rajasthan State Groundwater Board believes one of these ancient buried channels may be the Saraswati. He knows the stories refer to the ancient river flowing through this area and says excitedly that carbon dating has revealed that the water they are finding is 4000 years old. That would date it to the time of the Saraswati. The modern search for the Saraswati was first sparked by an English engineer called CF Oldham in 1893 when he was riding his horse along the dry bed of a seasonal Rajasthani river called the Ghaggar.

As he rode on, he was struck by a sudden thought. The Ghaggar when it flowed, was a small, puny river and there was no reason for its bed to be up to 3km wide in places unless it occupied the former course of a much larger river - the Saraswati. The discovery of a vast prehistoric civilisation that lived along the banks of a major river, has added impetus to the growing modern belief that the Saraswati has been found. Over 1000 archaeological sites have been found on the course of this river and they date from 3000 BC. One of these sites is the prehistoric (Harappan civilization) town of Kalibangan in northern Rajasthan."
http://www.stephen-knapp.com/recent_research_on_the_sarasvati_river.htm

"Girls and women from the 80-odd houses in the village have to just go down a sand dune to a tubewell that oozes ‘meetha paani’ (potable water) throughout the year."
http://indianexpress.com/article/in...-saraswati-plan-water-marks-all-along-course/


meetha.jpg

 
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