Thermopolis, Wyoming, is an
interesting city (pop. ~3200) located at the southern end of the Big Horn Basin
on U. S. 20. The
city was named after the Pass of Thermopylae, famed in Greek history as the
Spartan battle ground. The word is combined from the Greek derivative which is
literally translated “City of Hot Mineral Baths” (www.wiki.wyoming
placenames.org).
The Big Horn River runs through town
and carves the beautiful Wind River Canyon as it cuts across the Owl Creek
Mountains to the south. As an
interesting sidelight, the Wind River changes names (to Big Horn) as it leaves
the canyon flowing north! Thermopolis is
a common rest stop on the way to/from Yellowstone National Park and has a long
history of thermal spring use by Native Americans and later settlers. Most of the springs were, at one time,
located on the Shoshone Reservation (ceded to the tribes in the 1868 Fort
Bridger Treaty) but were acquired, through purchase, by the U. S. Government in
1896. The city now bills itself as home
to “The World’s Largest Mineral Hot Springs” and also is home to Hot Springs
State Park. In addition, there are at several
other hot springs or wells in or near the city.
Location and relief map of Wyoming. Thermopolis (denoted by O) is located on the Big Horn River north of the Owl Creek Mountains (denoted by X’s). Map adapted from U. S. Geological Survey. |
As the great conservationist Aldo
Leopold once said, everything is
connected to everything else. So it is at Thermopolis where all of the
springs and vents are connected to the same thermal system with total discharge
perhaps over three million gallons per day (Breckenridge and Hinckley, 1978). However, to a geologist, or even causal
traveler, the most interesting aspect of these wells/springs may well be the
related travertine deposits.
The springs at Hot Springs State
Park are those most visited by travelers, especially visitors wanting to “take
a soak”! Most of these related waters
have high concentraions of Calcium, Magnesium, Sodium and Potassium ions and
make human consumption somewhat problomatic.
I can personally attest to gastric discomfort (especially in 105O F
summer weather) after consuming similar water while working in South
Dakota! The thermal springs also have
fairly high concentraions of HCO3 (bicarbonate ion), SO4
(sulfate), and Cl (clorine). The pH
usually is calculated as between 7-8 (basic), about the same as sea water.
White Sulphur Springs is one of the
largest springs in the park with a temperature of ~127O F and
flowing at a rate of about 200 gallons per minute (gpm) (Breckenridge and
Hinckley, 1978). The name most likely
comes from its content of Hydrogen sulfide (H2S), a compound
notorious for the foul smell of rotten eggs. At one time sulphur was mined from deposits near
the spring.
Black Sulfur Spring in the park is
now inactive but does form a pool in bottom of a 20 foot cavern with bubbling
mud high in sulphur. Dye tests indicate
the spring now has Terrace Spring as its outlet (Breckenridge and Hinckley,
1978).
The spring in the park that most
visitors are familiar with, and the largest, is Big Spring with a temperature
of ~133O F and a flow of over ~2900 gpm (Breckenridge and Hinckley,
1978). The spring water enters a 25-foot
pool and then feeds the State Bathouse pools and pools/tubs of five commercial
establishments. The commercial entities
vent their water vapors via a standpipe and this action has created a really
interesting phenomenon known as Teepee Fountain (see at top of article). This feature is a 20-foot high cone of
travertine streaked with algal growth, a very impressive piece of artwork.
North of town is another
interesting thermal feature—Sacajawea Well, first drilled for oil in 1918. Evidently at the 900 foot level the well hit artesian
pressurized hot water that blew the drilling rig off the casing! Travertine began forming around the pipe and
continues today. The well flows at 1.37
million gallons per day at ~130O F.
Sacajawea Well located north of town at Payne’s Fountain of Youth RV Park and is, according to the park, the “third largest hot mineral pool in the World”. Photo courtesy of www.city-data.com |
Travertine is a sedimentary rock, a
type of chemical limestone, that usually precipitates from carbonate-rich
waters associated with springs (especially thermal springs), streams
(especially waterfalls), and caves. Both calcite (CaCO3, forms in
trigonal crystal system; most stable of calcium carbonate polymorphs) and
aragonite (CaCO3, a polymorph of calcium carbonate forming
in orthorhombic crystal system; is metastable and alters to calcite) are found
in travertine with the former usually found in cooler waters and the latter in
hot water (Pentecost, 2005). Travertine commonly forms when dissolved
carbon dioxide (CO2) in peculating groundwater, in this case the
springs, creates a weak carbonic acid (H2CO3) that then
reacts with limestone (CaCO3) to form soluble calcium acid carbonate
[CaH2(CO3)] which then precipitates when the water
evaporates at an exposed surface (Rogers, 2011). Pure travertine is generally white but
impurities commonly impart a brown/tan color to the rock. However, the bright colors at Thermopolis are
due to thermophilic (heat loving) organisms: Bacteria (Schizophyta), Blue-green
Algae (Cyanophyta), and Green Algae (Chlorophyta). The algae are phtosynthetic in nature and contain
green chlorophyll and impart a green color to the travertine. In addition, the Blue-green Algae have a blue
pigment, phycocyanin. Some, such as
those at Thermopolis also contain red, yellow, brown and orange pigments (Terrell,
1978). The Bacteria lack a cell nucleus
and are non-photosynthitic but may use sulphur in the water as part of their
food production. They may impart colors
from white to pink/purple to yellow (Terrell, 1978).
Travertine “terraces” at Hot
Springs State Park.
|
Breckenridge and Hinckley (1978) described the
geohydrology of the artesian Thermopolis thermal system as follows: water
enters the Paleozoic rocks (all are aquifers but especially the Madison
Limestone) exposed in the nearby Owl Creek Mountains. These rocks are capped by the Jurassic
Chugwater Formation, a rather impervious caprock, and dip away from the
mountains toward the Big Horn River. At
Thermopolis a large fold, with a crest fault, appears and bring the Paleozoic
rocks to the surface and the water is released under pressure. The solution conduits of the Madison
Limestone are thought to be the major source of the water. The next major question involves the source
of the heat. Most thermal springs are
related to either water heated at great depths in the earth’s surface, or heat
generated from nearby igneous activity. At
Thermopolis “the water has become heated because it has circulated
to great depths” (Whitehead, 1996).
Geologic cross-section through Hot Springs State Park. Sketch from Breckenridge and Hinckley (1978). |
Thermopolis is a great little town
to visit and I plan on going back and “taking to the waters”. The price is right---free at Hot Springs
State Park! In addition, the Wyoming
Dinosaur Center in town is an interesting museum, and the nearby Wind River
Canyon has some spectacular geologic outcrops.
REFERENCES CITED
Breckenridge, R. M. and B. S.
Hinckley, 1978, Thermal Springs of Wyoming: Wyoming Geological Survey Bulletin
60.
Pentecost, A., 2005, Travertine: Kluwer Academic Publishers Group, Dordrecht,
Netherlands.
Rogers, J. D., 2011, Grand Canyon
Research Travertine and Pleistocene Lakes: http://web.mst.edu/~rogersda/grand_canyon_research/
Terrell, T. T., 1978, Vegetation of
Wyoming Thermal Springs Outside of Wyoming in
Breckenridge, R. M. and B. S. Hinckley, Thermal Springs of Wyoming: Wyoming
Geological Survey Bulletin 60.
Whitehead, R. L., 1996, Ground
Water Atlas of the United States; Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming:
U. S. Geological Survey Report HA 730-I.
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