Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'City of Bath' has mentioned 'Water' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
In the 17th century, claims were made for the curative properties of water from the springs, and Bath became popular as a spa town in the Georgian era.
[19] After the failure of Roman authority in the first decade of the 5th century, the baths fell into disrepair and were eventually lost as a result of rising water levels and silting.
Also, Some Enquiries into the Nature of the water in 1676.
Water bubbling up from the ground as geothermal springs originates as rain on the Mendip Hills.
The rain percolates through limestone aquifers to a depth of between 9,000 to 14,000xc2xa0ft (2,700 to 4,300xc2xa0m) where geothermal energy raises the water's temperature to between 64 and 96xc2xa0xc2xb0C (approximately 147xe2x80x93205xc2xa0xc2xb0F).
Under pressure, the heated water rises to the surface along fissures and faults in the limestone.
Hot water at a temperature of 46xc2xa0xc2xb0C (115xc2xa0xc2xb0F) rises here at the rate of 1,170,000 litres (257,364xc2xa0impxc2xa0gal) daily,[83] from the Pennyquick geological fault.
Taking the waters is described in Charles Dickens' novel The Pickwick Papers in which Pickwick's servant, Sam Weller, comments that the water has "a very strong flavour o' warm flat irons".
In August 2003 The Three Tenors sang at a concert to mark the opening of the Thermae Bath Spa, a new hot water spa in the city centre, but delays to the project meant the spa actually opened three years later on 7 August 2006.
Bath has lent its name to one other distinctive recipexc2xa0xe2x80x93 Bath Oliversxc2xa0xe2x80x93 a dry baked biscuit invented by Dr William Oliver, physician to the Mineral Water Hospital in 1740.