Geological Time, p. 3
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In my Nevada salad days of January, when I was a mere hot-pond dilettante, I described a few thermal springs in accounts of visits to the Black Rock Desert (The Empty Quarter) and Carson City (A Hard Rain) But now that I’m entering the ranks of serious soakers, I’m going to use this Travelblog to focus on the first two trips after we began our collection in earnest. We spent Presidents’ Day weekend exploring the thermal pools in the mountain valleys south of Austin in the center of the state. And then we nixed the Caribbean and instead spent Spring Break in Nevada’s northwest corner seeking the baths along the Oregon Trail.

The tradition of soaking in a hot spring is as old as civilization. Long before we modern desert tourists made it a ritual of our own sybaritic cult, hundreds of years before the pioneers of the gold rush cooked their beans in the boiling water, the Romans made a religious ritual of their immersion in a heated bath. Because the hills of Tuscany are not, in that regard, as favored as the hills of Nevada, most of the Roman baths were artificially heated. But some, including the still-flowing waters of Roman Aquae Sulis, dedicated to the goddess Minerva (the modern city of Bath, in England) derived their energy from the fiery gods of the earth’s interior.


Steam Rising from the Trego Ditch

In many countries, the therapeutic immersion in hot springs (balneology) is an accepted part of the medical mainstream. A doctor’s prescription to “take the waters” may even be covered by health insurance. Balneotherapists believe that through bathing, drinking, or inhaling the warm vapors of therapeutic springs, you may increase metabolism, stimulate digestion, heal the skin, or strengthen the immune system.
I don’t know if I would subscribe to all this rationalization of the reasons why hot water feels good. Personally, I think the therapy is more mental than physical. I am a (70%) water creature living on a water planet. I began my life in a warm, water-filled womb. It seems natural, therefore, that I should feel so comforted sitting in a Nevada hot spring.

 
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