aquifer under the
North Downs, England at
AlburyEngineers and
environmental consultants use the term
borehole to collectively describe all of the various types of holes drilled as part of a
geotechnical investigation or environmental site assessment (a so-called Phase II ESA). This includes holes advanced to collect soil samples, water samples or rock cores, to advance
in situ sampling equipment, or to install
monitoring wells or
piezometers. Samples collected from boreholes are often tested in a laboratory to determine their physical properties, or to assess levels of various chemical constituents or contaminants. Typically, a borehole used as a
water well is completed by installing a vertical pipe (casing) and well screen to keep the borehole from caving. This also helps prevent surface
contaminants from entering the borehole and protects any installed pump from drawing in sand and sediment.
Oil and natural gas wells are completed in a similar, albeit usually more complex, manner. As detailed in
proxy (climate), borehole temperature measurements at a series of different depths can be effectively "
inverted" (a mathematical formula to solve a matrix equation) to help estimate historic surface temperatures. Clusters of small-diameter boreholes equipped with heat exchangers made of plastic PEX pipe can be used to store heat or cold between opposing seasons in a mass of native rock. The technique is called
seasonal thermal energy storage. Media that can be used for this technique ranges from gravel to bedrock. There can be a few to several hundred boreholes, and in practice, depths have ranged from . ==History==