Water hardness: definition, measurement and how to reduce it
Our planet’s water continuously changes state by advancing through a circuit known as the water cycle. One such step is rain, when water that had evaporated into the atmosphere flows back to earth. In doing so, it comes into contact with calcareous rocks and is loaded with sediment. This water is said to be calcareous or hard: saturated with minerals that it retains once it reaches our running water networks despite the treatment stages to make it drinkable.