Montana Hot Springs Spa

A spring is a component of the hydrosphere, namely any natural occurrence where water flows on to the surface of the earth from below the surface. Thus it is where the aquifer surface meets the ground surface.

Formation

A spring may be the result of karst topography where surface water has infiltrated the Earth's surface (recharge area), becoming part of the area groundwater. The groundwater then travels though a network of cracks and fissures - openings ranging from intergranular spaces to large caves. The water eventually emerges from below the surface, in the form of a spring.

The forcing of the spring to the surface can be the result of a confined aquifer in which the recharge area of the spring water table rests at a higher elevation than that of the outlet. Spring water forced to the surface by elevated sources are artesian wells. This is possible even if the outlet is in the form of a 300-foot deep cave. In this case the cave is used like a hose by the higher elevated recharge area of groundwater to exit through the lower elevation opening.

Non-artesian springs may simply flow from a higher elevation through the earth to a lower elevation and exit in the form of a spring, using the ground like a drainage pipe.

Still other springs are the result of pressure from an underground source in the earth, in the form of volcanic activity. The result can be water at elevated temperature as a hot spring.

The action of the groundwater continually dissolves permeable bedrock such as limestone and dolmite creating vast cave systems.

Types of spring outlets

  • Seepage or filtration spring. The term seep refers to springs with small flow rates in which the source water has filtered into permeable earth.
  • Fracture springs, discharge from faults, joints, or fissures in the earth, in which springs have followed a natural course of voids or weaknesses in the bedrock.
  • Tubular springs are essentially water dissolved and create underground channels, basically cave systems.

Spring flow

Spring discharge, or resurgence, is determined by the "spring's" recharge basin. Factors include the size of the area in which groundwater is captured, the amount of precipitation, the size of capture points, and the size of the spring outlet. Water may leak into the underground system from many sources including permeable earth, sinkholes, and losing streams. In some cases entire creeks seemingly disappear as the water sinks into the ground via the stream bed. Grand Gulf State Park in Missouri is an example of an entire creek vanishing into the groundwater system. The water emerges nine miles away, forming some of the discharge of Mammoth Spring in Arkansas.

Classification

Springs are often classified by the volume of the water they discharge. The largest springs are called "first-magnitude," defined as springs that discharge water at a rate of at least 2800 liters or 100 cubic feet (2.8 m 3 ) of water per second. Some locations contain many first-magnitude springs, such as Central Florida where there are 33 known to be that size, the southern Missouri Ozarks (11 known of first-magnitude), and 11 more in the Thousand Springs area along the Snake River in Idaho. The scale for spring flow is as follows:

Spring water content

Minerals become dissolved in the water as it moves through the underground rocks. This may give the water flavor and even carbon dioxide bubbles, depending on the nature of the geology through which it passes. This is why spring water is often bottled and sold as mineral water, although the term is often the subject of deceptive advertising. Springs that contain significant amounts of minerals are sometimes called 'mineral springs'. Springs that contain large amounts of dissolved sodium salts, mostly sodium carbonate, are called 'soda springs'. Many resorts have developed around mineral springs and are known as spa towns.

A stream carrying the outflow of a spring to a nearby primary stream is called a spring branch or run. Groundwater tends to maintain a relatively long-term average temperature of its aquifer; so flow from a spring may be cooler than a summer day, but remain unfrozen in the winter. The cool water of a spring and its branch may harbor species such as certain trout that are otherwise ill-suited to a warmer local climate.

Historic uses

Springs have been used for a variety of human needs including drinking water, powering of mills, and navigation, and more recently some have been used for electricity generation.

Modern uses

Present-day uses include recreational activities, such as trout-fishing, swimming, and floating. The water is also used for livestock and fish hatcheries.

Notable springs

  • Big Spring, Missouri
  • Blue Spring, Florida
  • Fontaine de Vaucluse, France
  • Giant Springs, Montana
  • Greer Spring, Missouri
  • Mammoth Spring, Arkansas
  • Maramec Spring, Missouri
  • Poland Spring, Maine
  • Rainbow Springs, Florida
  • Saratoga Springs, New York
  • Te Waikoropupu Springs, New Zealand
  • Wakulla Springs, Florida
  • Warm Springs, Georgia
  • São Lourenço, Minas Gerais, Brazil

See also

  • Body of water
  • Chalk stream
  • Cienega
  • Drinking water
  • Geyser
  • Hot spring
  • Lake
  • List of Ozark springs
  • List of spa towns
  • Mineral water
  • Pond
  • Soakage
  • Spa towns
  • Source (river or stream)
  • Water cycle
  • Water well


References

  1. ^ http://ga.water.usgs.gov/edu/watercyclesprings.html
  2. ^ http://www.tfn.net/springs/Springbook/FirstMagnitude.htm
  3. ^ http://www.if.uidaho.edu/~johnson/ifiwrri/1000spgs.html
  • Springs of Missouri , Vineyard and Feder, Missouri Department of Natural Resources, Devision of Geology and Land Survey in cooperation with U.S. Geological Survey and Missouri Department of Conservation, 1982

External links

  • "The Science of Springs"
  • "What Is A Spring?"
  • List of First-Magnitude springs in Florida
  • Technical and educational material on mineral springs and mineral water in Victoria
  • "Database of Historically Documented Springs and Springflow Measurements in Texas"
  • "Historic water quality data for selected springs in Texas"
  • The Water Cycle:

    The Spa Hot Springs Motel in White Sulphur Springs ...

    The Spa Hot Springs Motel in White Sulphur Springs Montana - Natural hot mineral springs to soothe away your cares. A clean, quiet & affordable motel - halfway between Glacier and ...

    ...

    Boulder Hot Springs Inn & Conference Center

    Montana’s historic Boulder Hot Springs Inn and Spa is located almost mid-way between Butte and Helena just off Interstate 15. It rests in the midst of southwest Montana’s ...

    ...

    Spa Hot Springs - Montana's Russell Country

    The Spa Hot Springs provides clean, comfortable rooms with a small-town Montana Atmosphere. We have two wonderful natural hot mineral pools which are drained, cleaned, and ...

    ...

    Wonderful waters, quirky hotel - Review of Boulder Hot ...

    Interested in Boulder Hot Springs Inn and Spa and Boulder? We'll send you updates with the ... (Please note, this hotel is located in Boulder Hot Springs, Montana, not in Ronan.

    ...

    Chico Hot Springs Resort and Day Spa

    Chico Hot Springs Resort and Day Spa is located at the foothills of the Absaroka Mountains in Paradise Valley Montana, just half an hour North of Yellowstone National Park.

    ...

    Best Hot Springs in Montana | Best Montana Hot Springs ...

    A prairie spa built on the site of a hot water well along the sparsely populated Montana Highline. The only hot springs along Montana’s northern tier, Sleeping Buffalo Resort has ...

    ...

    Boulder Hot Springs Inn and Spa (Boulder, MT) - Hotel ...

    Interested in Boulder Hot Springs Inn and Spa and Boulder? We'll send you updates with the ... (Please note, this hotel is located in Boulder Hot Springs, Montana, not in Ronan.

    ...

    Southwest Montana Hot Springs - Hot Spring Trails

    Spa Hot Springs Motel ... Related information:... From the guidebook Touring Montana and Wyoming Hot Springs

    ...

    Boulder Hot Springs Inn and Spa - Boulder - Montana ...

    Planning business meetings in California and the west coast region is easy with Smart Meetings. Search meeting destinations online, find event properties, news and information ...

    ...

    Spa Hot Springs Motel | Montana Lodging | Montana ...

    202 W. Main Street • P.O. Box 370 • White Sulphur Springs, MT 59645 Phone: 406-547-3366 • Fax: 406-547-3378 Website • Email

    ...