“…Adding to their complex emergence environment, springs often support a wide array of microhabitats not observed in wetlands. The "sphere" into which the aquifer discharges was initially described by Meinzer (1923), and then simplified by Hynes (1970) into three classes: rheocrene (channel emergence), limnocrene (pool emergence), and helocrene (wet meadow emergence). Springer et al (2008) and Springer and Stevens (2009) reviewed literature and expanded this historical scheme to include 12 spheres of discharge of terrestrial springs, including: (1) springs that emerge in caves, (2) exposure springs, (3) artesian fountains, (4) geysers, (5) gushets, (6) contact hanging gardens, (7) helocrene wet meadows, (8) hill slope springs, (9) hypocrene buried springs, (10) limnocrene surficial lentic pools, (11) mineralized mounds, and (12) rheocrene lotic channel floors.…”