I assume you live in USA, so search the internet for: geysers in America. Are you near Yellowstone Park National Park? - which is famous for geysers.
it can be -see Yellowstone park geysers
my friend recently told me it was called haze. =)
a hot spring or geyser (I believe).
Deep in the earth, beneath your feet, the molten rock of the earth's interior transmits heat upward through sold rock to ground water which has penetrated to that depth. This extremely hot water then forces its way upward through fissures and fractures, warming rocks and water as it goes. Where the hot water can escape at the ground surface, a hot spring is formed. Extremely hot water has properties important to the development of a hot spring's plumbing system. First, its lower density allows it to rise more easily through small channels. Second, it is a much better solvent than is cooler water; it dissolves astounding amounts of silica, a common component of volcanic rock. In this way, channels are enlarged while others are soon clogged with new deposits. The dissolved minerals are rapidly deposited around the hot springs and geysers as the water cools and can no longer hold it in solution. Hot springs differ from geysers in that their underground systems allow rapid circulation of water. The rising hot water dissipates heat energy by evaporation or runoff, while convection currents return the cooler water to the underground system, keeping it in equilibrium.
An aquifer contains ground water
ground
This type of water is called spring water.
Is the water not hot? Or no water coming out the hot tap? not comming out at all
Hot spring
The water is probably frozen in the pipe
get a plummer to look at the problem
Steam.
m
Hot water from the ground.
geysers
Because your stupid! Call a plumber!
Hot air + cold water = atmospheric instability When it gets out of hand find high ground...