. Appendix to the Journals of the Senate and Assembly of the ... session of the Legislature of the State of California. er. There is a resident physician during the summer are accommodations for 315 guests. No water is bottled for sale. There are twelve principal springs in active use, and over twentyothers. All have more or less excess carbonic acid gas bubbling fromthem—the i\Iagic spring being especially vigorous. The temperaturesare: Neptune, 79° F.; Iron, 73°; Diana, 80; Seltzer,°; Kidney, 80°; Magic, 80°; two Magnesia, ° and 73°(20 inches apart); Sulphui, °; Dutc


. Appendix to the Journals of the Senate and Assembly of the ... session of the Legislature of the State of California. er. There is a resident physician during the summer are accommodations for 315 guests. No water is bottled for sale. There are twelve principal springs in active use, and over twentyothers. All have more or less excess carbonic acid gas bubbling fromthem—the i\Iagic spring being especially vigorous. The temperaturesare: Neptune, 79° F.; Iron, 73°; Diana, 80; Seltzer,°; Kidney, 80°; Magic, 80°; two Magnesia, ° and 73°(20 inches apart); Sulphui, °; Dutch or Ems, 75°, andArsenic, 77°. The fissures from which these last two flow are but LAKE COUNTY. 219 18 inches apart in the edge of the creek bed, and are unique not onlyin situation but in appearance as well (see photo No. 4). The Dutchis crystal clear, while the Arsenic is milky. The springs at Highlandare principally in serpentine. Gas is seen bubbling up through thewater in the creek at several points. At places in the serpentine wereobserved rounded nodules of the original, unaltered sedimentaries. Photo No. 4. *Arsenic and Ems springs, at Highland Springs, Lake County, California. (sandstone and shale), as noted by Becker in U. S. G. S. Mon. XIII(pp. 277 and 278). Bibl.: R. VI, Part I, p. 62; VIII, p. 328; XII, p. 336; XIII, p. 511;R. of M., Lake County, p. 6; IT. S. G. S. Bull. No. 32, pp. 205,212; Water Sup. Pap. 338, pp. 183-185; Anderson (op. cit.),pp. 169, 175. Hoppin Estate. There are two springs on land owned by the HoppinEstate, adjoining the Bartlett Springs property. They are about 100feet apart, and about 100 yards from Bartletts }^ are at present, except locally. These are the twosprings included in Register of Mines of Lake County (p. 5) underBartlett, as Iron, No. 4 and Magnesia, No. 5. Their temperatures 59°. are: magnesia, 60° F iron. Bibl.: U. S. G. S. Water Sup. Pap. 338, p. 201. J2() MINES AND MINERAL HESOURCE


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