HOT SPRINGS
Analyses of the Waters of The Hot Springs of Arkansas
Geological Sketch of Hot Springs, Arkansas
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GEOLOGICAL SKETCH OF THE HOT SPRINGS DISTRICT, ARKANSAS.


SOURCE OF HEAT

While there have been many theories advanced to account for the source of the hot waters, the only hypothesis that stands the test of scientific inquiry is the one which ascribes the heat of the waters to still hot but concealed bodies of igneous rock. It seems scarcely necessary to call attention to the absurdity of the idea that either slaking lime in the depths of the earth or chemical reaction of the waters with the atmosphere could be the cause of the heat. That the waters come from a depth sufficient for their heating by the normal increment of earth heat (1° for every 50 feet) seems unreasonable, since it would necessitate a depth of nearly 5,000 feet to give the waters their present temperature, even assuming that they were not cooled in their course upward. The composition of the gases given off by the waters shows that they contain atmospheric air as well as carbon dioxide. That the heat of the waters is due to the heat developed by the folding of the rocks, which is the theory given to account for the heat at the Virginia Hot Springs, is not probable, for the folding at Hot Springs is not more intense than elsewhere in the mountain regions of Arkansas, and no evidence of hot spring action has been found at any other localities except where igneous rocks are present.

It is believed that the heat comes from a great body of still heated igneous rocks intruded in the earth's crust by volcanic agencies and underlying a large part of central Arkansas. The existence of such a mass is shown by the great bodies of granite seen at Potash Sulphur Springs and Magnet Cove, where the rocks have been exposed by the wearing down of the overlying sediments, though the igneous rocks seen were of course long since cooled. At Magnet Cove, moreover, there are tufa deposits which show the former occurrence of hot springs.

This hypothesis is strengthened by the occurrence of intrusive dikes at various localities about the springs, and their trend and occurrence indicate that the molten material which filled the fissures did not come from the bodies of rock now exposed at Potash Sulphur Springs or at Magnet Cove, but had some deep-seated source, whose location is indicated by the dikes as being approximately under the hot springs. Deep-seated waters converted into vapors by contact with this "batholith" of hot rock probably ascend through fissures toward the surface, where they probably meet cold spring waters which are heated by the vapors. As the igneous dikes near by are fissures reaching down to this great mass of igneous magma which have been ifiled by it to form dikes, it is not unreasonable to suppose that fissures extend down to the now solid but still hot igneous mass.



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