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・ Slaty-backed thornbill
・ Slaty-backed thrush
・ Slaty-bellied tesia
・ Slaty-blue flycatcher
・ Slaty-breasted
・ Slaty-breasted rail
・ Slaty-breasted tinamou
・ Slaty-breasted wood rail
・ Slaty-capped flycatcher
・ Slaty-capped shrike-vireo
・ Slaty-crowned antpitta
・ Slaty-headed longbill
・ Slaty-headed parakeet
・ Slaty-headed tody-flycatcher
・ Slates (EP)
Slates Hot Springs, California
・ Slatina
・ Slatina (Bor)
・ Slatina (Jagodina)
・ Slatina (Kladno District)
・ Slatina (Klatovy District)
・ Slatina (Knjaževac)
・ Slatina (Kruševac)
・ Slatina (Leskovac)
・ Slatina (Litoměřice District)
・ Slatina (Loznica)
・ Slatina (Negotin)
・ Slatina (Novi Pazar)
・ Slatina (Novo Goražde)
・ Slatina (Plzeň-North District)


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Slates Hot Springs, California : ウィキペディア英語版
Slates Hot Springs, California

Slates Hot Springs (formerly, Big Sur Hot Springs,〔 Slate's Hot Springs,〔 Slate's Springs,〔 and Slate's Hot Sulphur Springs〔) is an unincorporated community in the Big Sur region of Monterey County, California.〔 It is located north-northwest of Lopez Point, at an elevation of 118 feet (36 m).〔

Thomas B. Slate settled at the site of the springs in 1868.〔 He claimed that the waters cured him of arthritis.〔 A resort developed which eventually was acquired by the Esalen Institute.〔 Hunter S. Thompson worked as a security guard at the springs for a period in 1961.
==The springs==
In 1918, the California State Mining Bureau issued a report from the state mineralogist about the springs and their properties. According to the report, Slates Hot Springs is the southernmost of the four groups of hot springs in coastal Monterey County. In 1918, J. A. Little owned the site. The water there issued at ten principal points in a distance of , halfway up the face of the bluffs that here border the ocean. A small private bathhouse has been built near the easternmost spring. The waters range in temperature from to , are mildly sulphuretted, and the run-off streams are lined with abundant green algous growth. Small deposits of alum, gypsum, and carbonate of lime or magnesia were noted at the edge of one spring. The waters taste distinctly sweetish.
About northwest of the main group, on the left bank of Hot Creek, is another spring, in temperature. This spring yields perhaps a minute and was in 1918 used for laundering clothes.〔
It is said that the location of the springs was described by an Indian to Thomas B. Slate, who made his way southward with difficulty along the steep, brushy slopes, and succeeded in finding only the warm spring beside the creek. Later, however, he came down the coast in a boat, found the springs on the bluff, and settled near them in 1868. The locality is occasionally made a camping place by deer hunters, but as of 1918, it is about by trail beyond the southern end of the wagon road, it was not often visited.〔
The formation exposed along the bluffs is of slates that have been described as being probably of Jurassic age. They are overlain by of gravel that is deposited on an ocean terrace along this portion of the coast. The heated water apparently emerges at the base of the gravel, though small warm flows also issue from the slate, close to the surf. It is said that when garden land on the terrace back of the springs has been irrigated for several weeks by a mountain stream the seepage water has so reduced the temperature of the hot springs that they are only tepid.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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