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Editing Reservoir

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Reservoirs are most commonly used to provide an internal [[well]]. Wells are an essential feature in any fortress; wounded dwarves require fresh water to drink and clean their wounds, and will die of dehydration if it is not provided or inaccessible (as often happens in a [[siege]]). However, they are very picky in terms of what they need: a proper well requires clean, flowing (not stagnant) water or else it will cause infections among your hospitalized dwarves.
 
Reservoirs are most commonly used to provide an internal [[well]]. Wells are an essential feature in any fortress; wounded dwarves require fresh water to drink and clean their wounds, and will die of dehydration if it is not provided or inaccessible (as often happens in a [[siege]]). However, they are very picky in terms of what they need: a proper well requires clean, flowing (not stagnant) water or else it will cause infections among your hospitalized dwarves.
  
Stagnant water must be cleaned and salt water (from an [[ocean]] or saltwater [[lake]]) must be desalinated: both tasks are performed by a [[screw pump]], and the easiest way to keep the clean water contained is in a reservoir. This also applies to cold or freezing maps, where water may only be available part of the year (or never at all), and hot or scorching maps, where water may evaporate over time. A secured 20×25×1 underground reservoir can last for many years without needing to be refilled. (A reservoir for a well should be deeper, though, to prevent the water hauled up from being "laced with mud".)
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Stagnant water must be cleaned and salt water (from an [[ocean]] or saltwater [[lake]]) must be desalinated: both tasks are performed by a [[screw pump]], and the easiest way to keep the clean water contained is in a reservoir. This also applies to cold or freezing maps, where water may only be available part of the year (or never at all), and hot or scorching maps, where water may evaporate over time. A secured 20x25x1 underground reservoir can last for many years without needing to be refilled. (A reservoir for a well should be deeper, though, to prevent the water hauled up from being "laced with mud".)
  
 
Reservoirs are additionally useful for the construction and reliability of large traps, like [[drowning chamber]]s, or passive water-using structures, like [[mist]] generators, on maps where the water supply freezes seasonally. In the former case, a special type of reservoir is an evaporation chamber, a large room into which water is dumped by gravity; the objective is to get rid of a lot of water quickly so the trap can be reused.
 
Reservoirs are additionally useful for the construction and reliability of large traps, like [[drowning chamber]]s, or passive water-using structures, like [[mist]] generators, on maps where the water supply freezes seasonally. In the former case, a special type of reservoir is an evaporation chamber, a large room into which water is dumped by gravity; the objective is to get rid of a lot of water quickly so the trap can be reused.

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