GoldenBusTours Blog

Hot Springs National Park – The Marvel of Bubbling Water

Hot Springs National Park – the Marvel of Bubbling WaterHot Springs National Park is home to the scenic icons of the arid American west. Hot Springs National Park is vast, primeval, and unpopulated. It covers over five thousand and five hundred acres of land area, located sixty miles from the Little Rock city, the capital of Arkansas, in the Garland County. This diminutive historic park draws over a million visitors all year round from the not just the inborn country but from all around the globe. As a matter of fact, the park is the reason for the city being there. The focus of this park is neither geysers nor glaciers but the Bubbling Waters; it is the Hot Springs National Park. There are forty-seven thermal springs flowing on the southwestern slope of Hot Spring Mountains.

Every day over seven thousand gallons of water bubbles from the earth. Thousands of years ago, the rain water started seeping into porous rocks of soil to depths of over four thousand feet. The water is heated in the cauldron of Earth innards; these waters began percolating back to the surface of the earth with a temperature of one hundred and forty-three degrees Fahrenheit. Native American first bathe in the springs of magic waters and called this place Valley of Vapors, and considered it sacred; according to their legends, these springs held a great spirit who heated the water through its breathe.

The Two Significant Bathhouses of Hot Springs:

Exit mobile version