Coyote Springs seems to be located on Kirtland Air Force Base. Correo is south and west of Albuquerque. The only 2 volcanoes remotely near Correo are the Jemez Mountain complex and Mount Taylor. They are both just barely enough to make warm springs. I don’t know of any springs in New Mexico where the water emerges from the ground above 160 degrees at the very most. The volcanoes are too old and tired. _____ From: geysers-bounces at lists.wallawalla.edu [mailto:geysers-bounces at lists.wallawalla.edu] On Behalf Of Jere B Bush Sent: Monday, January 10, 2011 3:02 PM To: 'Geyser Observation Reports' Subject: RE: [Geysers] New Mexico "geyser" Scott, Is Coyote Springs in about the right place? 34.987°N 107.137°W jereb From: geysers-bounces at lists.wallawalla.edu [mailto:geysers-bounces at lists.wallawalla.edu] On Behalf Of TSBryan at aol.com Sent: Saturday, January 08, 2011 7:49 PM To: geysers at lists.wallawalla.edu Subject: [Geysers] New Mexico "geyser" Pretty sad around Tucson this evening, but.... I read in a book about Navajo place names that there is/was a feature called "The Geyser" (Navajo name roughly To Alchini = "Wild Water"), located in Valencia County "8 miles south of Correo" (Correo maybe being the same as Suanee, on I-40 (?) ). Any New Mexicanos have any info about such a thing? Scott Bryan No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 9.0.872 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/3371 - Release Date: 01/09/11 23:34:00 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: </geyser-list/attachments/20110110/f2899fa7/attachment.html>