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Saturday 26 July 2014

Water collected from depths below the Surface.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_quality

Water collected from depths below the surface will normally be held at the reduced pressure of the atmosphere; so gas dissolved in the water may escape into unfilled space at the top of the container. Atmospheric gas present in that air space may also dissolve into the water sample. Other chemical reaction equilibria may change if the water sample changes temperature. Finely divided solid particles formerly suspended by water turbulence may settle to the bottom of the sample container, or a solid phase may form from biological growth or chemical precipitation. Microorganisms within the water sample may biochemically alter concentrations of oxygen, carbon dioxide, and organic compounds. These problems are of special concern during measurement of chemicals assumed to be significant at very low concentrations.

Changing carbon dioxide concentrations may alter pH and change solubility of chemicals of interest.

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