Done
DoneTypes: sulphur springs; borax springs; gypsum springs; saline springs; radium springs (or radioactive springs); iron springs; Petrifying well
Done Sometimes called bubbling springs or boiling springs
Done Solution tubular springs; Lava tubular springs
Rock dam springs; Fracture springs
Classification of hot spring and warm spring per NOAA. Hot springs; spa towns; Mud volcanoes; Volcanic springs; Geysers
Diatoms, bacteria, fungal mats, microorganisms, aquatic insects, extremophiles, molluscs
archaeological record, artifacts, etc.
Water hole; ojo; spa; well head; fount; Cenote - are all cenotes classified as sinkholes or are some springs?
Done Springs have been represented in culture through art, mythology and folklore throughout history. The Fountain of Youth is a mythical spring, which was said to restore youth to anyone who drank from it. [1] It has been claimed that the fountain is located in St. Augustine, Florida, and was discovered by Juan Ponce de León in 1513, though it has not demonstrated the power to restore youth and most historians dispute the veracity of Ponce de León's discovery. [2] [3]
Pythia, also known as the Oracle at Delphi was the high priestess of the Temple of Apollo. She delivered prophesies in a frenzied state of divine possession that were "induced by vapours rising from a chasm in the rock". It is beleived that the vapors were emitted from the Kerna spring at Delphi. [4] [5]
The Greek myth of Narcissus describes a young man who fell in love with his reflection in the still pool of a spring. Narcissus gazed into "an unmuddied spring, silvery from its glittering waters, which neither shepherds nor she-goats grazing on the mountain nor any other cattle had touched, which neither bird nor beast nor branch fallen from a tree had disturbed." (Ovid) [6]
The early 20th c. American photographer, James Reuel Smith created a comprehensive series of photographs documenting the historical springs of New York City before they were capped by the city after the advent of the municipal water system. [7] Smith later photographed springs in Europe leading to his book, Springs and Wells in Greek and Roman Literature, Their Legends and Locations (1922). [8] [9] The book covered various regions in Italy and Greece including Peloponnesus, Central Greece, Magna Graecia, Greek Islands and Asia Minor, as well as other countriesEurope, Africa and the Middle East. [9] [10] [1]
The 19th c. Japanese artists Utagawa Hiroshige and Utagawa Toyokuni III created a series of wood-block prints, Two Artists Tour the Seven Hot Springs (Sōhitsu shichitō meguri) in 1854. [11]
{{
cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (
link)
{{
cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (
link)
NYHS Digital Collection
was invoked but never defined (see the
help page).Done
DoneTypes: sulphur springs; borax springs; gypsum springs; saline springs; radium springs (or radioactive springs); iron springs; Petrifying well
Done Sometimes called bubbling springs or boiling springs
Done Solution tubular springs; Lava tubular springs
Rock dam springs; Fracture springs
Classification of hot spring and warm spring per NOAA. Hot springs; spa towns; Mud volcanoes; Volcanic springs; Geysers
Diatoms, bacteria, fungal mats, microorganisms, aquatic insects, extremophiles, molluscs
archaeological record, artifacts, etc.
Water hole; ojo; spa; well head; fount; Cenote - are all cenotes classified as sinkholes or are some springs?
Done Springs have been represented in culture through art, mythology and folklore throughout history. The Fountain of Youth is a mythical spring, which was said to restore youth to anyone who drank from it. [1] It has been claimed that the fountain is located in St. Augustine, Florida, and was discovered by Juan Ponce de León in 1513, though it has not demonstrated the power to restore youth and most historians dispute the veracity of Ponce de León's discovery. [2] [3]
Pythia, also known as the Oracle at Delphi was the high priestess of the Temple of Apollo. She delivered prophesies in a frenzied state of divine possession that were "induced by vapours rising from a chasm in the rock". It is beleived that the vapors were emitted from the Kerna spring at Delphi. [4] [5]
The Greek myth of Narcissus describes a young man who fell in love with his reflection in the still pool of a spring. Narcissus gazed into "an unmuddied spring, silvery from its glittering waters, which neither shepherds nor she-goats grazing on the mountain nor any other cattle had touched, which neither bird nor beast nor branch fallen from a tree had disturbed." (Ovid) [6]
The early 20th c. American photographer, James Reuel Smith created a comprehensive series of photographs documenting the historical springs of New York City before they were capped by the city after the advent of the municipal water system. [7] Smith later photographed springs in Europe leading to his book, Springs and Wells in Greek and Roman Literature, Their Legends and Locations (1922). [8] [9] The book covered various regions in Italy and Greece including Peloponnesus, Central Greece, Magna Graecia, Greek Islands and Asia Minor, as well as other countriesEurope, Africa and the Middle East. [9] [10] [1]
The 19th c. Japanese artists Utagawa Hiroshige and Utagawa Toyokuni III created a series of wood-block prints, Two Artists Tour the Seven Hot Springs (Sōhitsu shichitō meguri) in 1854. [11]
{{
cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (
link)
{{
cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (
link)
NYHS Digital Collection
was invoked but never defined (see the
help page).