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<DIV>I was at Gerlach, Nevada on July 17, 2004. All the mud pots and
hot springs I photographed </DIV>
<DIV>(see: <A
href="http://www.uweb.ucsb.edu/~glennon/geysers/lesser/">http://www.uweb.ucsb.edu/~glennon/geysers/lesser/</A> )
were either on private land or under long-term lease. Of the several locals
with whom I spoke, all had concerns about the geothermal plants affecting the
hot springs (both Great Boiling and Wards). My impression: some
were concerned about general, environmental impact, and others about
water scarcity. Everyone seemed to harbor a resentment that the electricity and
profits produced would mostly go outside the area.</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>During my visit, Fly Ranch and the nearby Thumb were spouting. Since they
are on private land, I only viewed them from the road. I did manage to gather
the appropriate landowner contacts -- so hopefully I'll be able to get a closer
look on my next trip. A Gerlach-based biology student called the Great
Boiling Springs landowner and I was able to gain access to the site
(but unable to question the owner about eruptive activity). According
to the student, a young woman studying birds of prey, the largest
spring complex exhibits an exchange of function between pools. She also noted
periods when lots of changes would occur all at once (different boiling
locations, more mud pot activity, more steam clouds). Overall, however, she
said she rarely visits the springs or pays them any notice. She had lived
about three hundred meters from the springs for a few months.</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>Anyway, none of the springs erupted while I was at Great Boiling Springs.
During my visit, only one or two springs looked hot and violent enough to
possibly erupt. At one spring, I noticed dead
algal mats and a border of killed grass. A few mud pots were
active, including one that formed recently (its mud buried clumps of
grass). I vaguely recall a short mud volcano or two, but the activity must have
been minor (and/or non-photogenic). No recent geothermal exploration activity
was apparent at Great Boiling Springs.</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>~Alan</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>J. Alan Glennon, Ph.D. Student<BR>NCGIA/Department of
Geography<BR>University of California, Santa Barbara<BR>Santa Barbara, CA
93106<BR><A
href="mailto:glennon@umail.ucsb.edu">glennon@umail.ucsb.edu</A></DIV></BODY></HTML>