gNat said:
I've attached another picture of hydrographs of the same time period from two wells. I've selected a longer time period (one month) for display in the lower graphs.
When I compare the two wells for 14 April 2019 to 14 May 2019 I see a good correlation.
Lunar phases during the period were approximately as follows.
First quarter 13 April 2019 minimum amplitude
Full moon 19 April 2019 max
Last quarter 27 April 2019 min
New moon 05 May 2019 max
First quarter 12 May 2019 min
Full moon 19 May 2019 max
When the moon is full or new the tidal amplitude should be greatest.
A quarter moon should have lower tidal amplitude.
The three minimum amplitudes in the record appear to correlate with the quarters.
The pattern appears to repeat with the expected 14.75 day period. For example, there are four broad daily peaks before the minimum on 27 April, last quarter. There are then four broad daily peaks before the minimum on 12 May, first quarter.
So it is actually looking more tidal.
It would be interesting to see atmospheric pressure over the same period. Maybe the roughly weekly cycles of highest water correspond to narrow low pressure troughs, between wider, more stable, high pressure systems.
The longer 3 week decline can be explained by steady aquifer discharge.
It would be easy to get sucked into this research and analysis.
My hypothesis would be that the hydrostatic pressure in the aquifer is relieved by the Earth Tide.