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The people listed below were born in or otherwise closely associated with the city of Hot Springs, South Dakota. Pages in category "People from Hot Springs, South Dakota" The following 17 pages are in this category, out of 17 total.
Hot Springs (Lakota: mni kȟáta; [6] "hot water") is a city in and county seat of Fall River County, South Dakota, United States. As of the 2020 census , the city population was 3,395. [ 7 ] In addition, neighboring Oglala Lakota County contracts the duties of Auditor, Treasurer and Register of Deeds to the Fall River County authority in Hot ...
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The Mammoth Site is a museum and paleontological site near Hot Springs, South Dakota, in the Black Hills. It is an active paleontological excavation site at which research and excavations are continuing. The facility encloses a prehistoric sinkhole that formed and was slowly filled with sediments during the Pleistocene era.
Fall River County is a county in the U.S. state of South Dakota. As of the 2020 census, the population was 6,973. [1] Its county seat is Hot Springs. [2] The county was founded in 1883. It is named for the Fall River which runs through it. [3]
Grabill had studios in Buena Vista, Colorado, Sturgis, Deadwood, Lead City and Hot Springs, South Dakota and Chicago, Illinois. He was the official photographer of the Black Hills and Fort Pierre Railroad and the Homestake Mining Company in South Dakota. [8]
This is a list of properties and historic districts in the U.S. state of South Dakota that are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.The state's more than 1,300 listings are distributed across all of its 66 counties.
The fossilized cycad beds were discovered in 1892 by F. H. Cole of Hot Springs, South Dakota, in the 120-million-year-old Dakota Sandstone Formation, near Minnekahta. [3] Cole sent photographs of the fossils to Professor Henry Newton, a geologist at the Smithsonian Institution.