Salado Springs
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Salado Springs | |
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Type | Karst springs |
Location | Salado, Texas, U.S.A |
Source | Faults along Balcones Escarpment |
Provides water for | Salado Creek |
Flow | 16.2 ft³/sec (460 liters/sec) |
Magnitude | 2 |
Elevation | 560 ft (171 m) above sea level |
Salado Springs is the name of five groups of springs at the town of Salado in Bell County, Texas, in the United States. The springs are located 48 miles (77 km) north of Austin or 135 miles (217 km) south of Dallas.
The springs, which are not saline (salado is Spanish for "salty"), were likely named for Salado Creek, which flows through the area.
[edit] Geography
The Salado Springs are located in the Balcones Fault zone, and they reach the surface through artesian pressure by way of faults in the Cretaceous Edwards limestone. The main recharge area for the springs is probably several miles to the soutwest in Williamson County, where several faults intersect with Salado Creek.
The larger of the springs include Robertson Springs, Big Boiling Spring, Elm, Benedict, and Anderson springs. The latter three are located downstream (east) of the others. During the 1980s, the combined flow from all of the springs averaged approximately 122 gallons (460 liters) per second.
[edit] History
The Salado Springs area was occupied for many years by the Tawakoni Indians, and by Paleo Indian peoples for thousands of years before that. Spanish explorer Juan Antonio Bustillo y Ceballos probably visited the springs in 1732 as he traveled westward through the region. The area was settled by Archibald Willingham in 1851 and subsequently became a well-known stage stop, as well as a stop on the Chisholm Trail. A dam was built in 1863 to power a mill, but this flooded some of the springs. A court order finally caused the the dam to be lowered in 1878.
[edit] External links
- Salado Springs from the Handbook of Texas Online
- Maps and aerial photos
- WikiSatellite view at WikiMapia
- Street map from MapQuest or Google Local
- Topographic map from TopoZone
- Aerial image or topographic map from TerraServer-USA
- Satellite image from Google Maps or Microsoft Virtual Earth