Steamboat Springs (Nevada)

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Steamboat Springs
225px
Fumarole at Steamboat Springs, Nevada
Highest point
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Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.[1]
Geography
Location Washoe County, Nevada, United States
Geology
Age of rock Pleistocene[1]
Reference no. 198
Mountain type lava domes[2]

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File:Geothermal Binary Power Plant Steamboat Springs NV.jpg
Ormat's 20MW geothermal power plant in Steamboat Springs.

Steamboat Springs is a small volcanic field of rhyolitic lava domes and flows in western Nevada, located south of Reno. There is extensive geothermal activity in the area, including numerous hot springs, steam vents, and fumaroles.[1] The residential portions of this area, located mostly east of Steamboat Creek and south of modern-day SR 341, are now known simply as Steamboat.

The state of Nevada has a Steamboat Springs Historical Marker (#198) situated along the eastern shoulder of the busy Carson–Reno Highway (US 395 Alt.), approximately 1.65 miles (2.66 km) south of the Mount Rose Junction (the intersection with SR 341 and SR 431). There were once several mineral spas operating here along Steamboat Creek, with at least one still in business.

History

Discovered in 1860 by a Frenchman, Felix Monet. In the early days, when the air was cool and calm, William Wright reported that as many as sixty or seventy columns of steam could be seen.[3]

Steamboat Springs was once also a depot on the Virginia & Truckee Railroad's Reno-Carson City line. In 1871, with tracks yet to be built south through the Washoe Valley to Carson City, this temporary rail terminus became an important transfer point for passengers and freight heading up the Geiger Grade on stagecoaches bound for Virginia City and the mines of the Comstock Lode. Once tracks were extended south the following summer to meet the existing Carson-Virginia City rail line, such transfer business fell off rapidly.

Name

Mark Twain wrote in August 1863 "..From one spring the boiling water is ejected a foot or more by the infernal force at work below, and in the vicinity of all of them one can hear a constant rumbling and surging, somewhat resembling the noises peculiar to a steamboat in motion - hence the name" [3]

References

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