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  2. Soboba Hot Springs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soboba_Hot_Springs

    Soboba Hot Springs are a historic hot springs and resort in Riverside County, California, United States.The springs issued from the side of a steep ravine "with narrow, precipitous sides, and the rock exposed is largely a crushed gneiss...the thermal character of the springs is due to crushing and slipping of the rocks". [4]

  3. SoCal's forgotten hot springs oasis is finally reopening ...

    www.aol.com/news/socals-forgotten-hot-springs...

    Murrieta Hot Springs has been home to a Christian Bible college, a vegetarian commune and the 'Catskills of SoCal.' Now comes a new chapter as a wellness resort.

  4. Tolantongo hot springs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tolantongo_hot_springs

    The hot springs are located on an ejido, the Ejido de San Cristóbal, a system of cooperative land ownership that restored rights to farmers and Mexico's Indigenous people to own their own land. During the 1970s, the site began to be developed through the construction of a road to the geothermal area, the caves, providing access to the hot ...

  5. Chico Hot Springs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chico_Hot_Springs

    Native Americans were the first people to use the Hot Springs; they primarily used it for bathing and laundry. On Jan 16, 1865, John S. Hackney, a miner, wrote, "I went out to the hot springs and washed my dirty 'duds." [3] This was the first recorded writing about the Hot Springs. By the year 1876, the hot water was used for different purposes ...

  6. Gilman Hot Springs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gilman_Hot_Springs

    Gilman Hot Springs, also known as San Jacinto Hot Springs or the Relief Springs, is a hot spring system in the Inland Empire area of Southern California. Located near Potrero Creek , the San Jacinto River , and California State Route 79 , [ 2 ] the springs system consists of "about half a dozen" springs named for the Mexican land grant Rancho ...

  7. Buckhorn Baths Motel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buckhorn_Baths_Motel

    The Buckhorn Baths Motel at 5900 East Main Street at the corner of North Recker Road in Mesa, Arizona was a small mineral hot springs resort which offered a bathhouse as well as both cottages and motel rooms for overnight stays. Beginning in 1936 as a gas station and store, Ted and Alice Sliger developed the property into a resort complex which ...