Anyone know what the deal is with the public bathing area? I thought this might be a natural hot spring area like Lava or Glenwood Springs, but wasn't that sort of a fountain geyser-y thing erupting in the bathing pool? Plus the cone-type geyser, which didn't look sudsy enough for CO2 but didn't look steamy enough for a hot water geyser. Could it be a natural hot spring with manmade features? Karen Webb On 10/19/2012 10:05 PM, JEFFREY CROSS wrote: > Here's an interesting video of Ixtlan. > > http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r9E5fWPNlyw&feature=related > > Can anyone who's actually been there identify any of the features that > are shown? > > Jeff Cross > jeff.cross at utah.edu > > > _______________________________________________ > Geysers mailing list > Geysers at lists.wallawalla.edu > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: </geyser-list/attachments/20121020/eb6151fc/attachment.html>