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Hot spring
pools or mineral baths are available at:
Dr. Wilkenson's
Resort
Golden Haven Spa
Roman Spa Hot Springs
The
practice of "taking the waters" for therapeutic
purposes reached its heyday in the 19th century, but springs
have been considered places of healing at many times and in
all parts of the world. The founding of Bath in England is attributed
in legend to Bladud, son of Lud Hudibras and father of King
Lear, who in 863 BC was cured of disease by immersion in the
steaming swamps. Roman colonists developed a considerable spa
there and also at Buxton, Derbyshire. After the departure of
the Romans the baths seem to have been long neglected, but many
churches were built on sites of ancient places of healing throughout
Europe, and cures were attributed to immersion in fonts fed
by the springs beneath the sanctuary. In the early 18th century
some Roman baths were rebuilt, many new "watering places"
were established, and spas became fashionable secular centres
of resort for the upper classes at the most seasonable times
of the year. For the ill and infirm many spas provided year-round
treatment centres under varying degrees of medical supervision.
Spa therapy is based on both the drinking of and the bathing in certain
waters containing properties believed to be of medicinal value. Mineral
springs usually contain noticeable quantities of salts in solution--including
carbonate and sulfate of lime, common salt, iron, and sulfur. Magnesia
and many trace minerals, notably lithium, also constitute medicinal
waters. In addition to solid constituents, gas is present in many waters
in considerable quantities. There is a little oxygen and a good deal
of nitrogen in some of them. The quantity of hydrosulfuric acid, even
in strong sulfuric waters, is small, but the volume of carbonic acid
present is often large, giving a noticeable effervescence. Thermal springs
are derived from two sources: meteoric waters that rise from considerable
depths along fissures of penetration; and volcanic waters, which reach
the surface in the form of either geysers or hot springs. Most thermal
water contains mineral substance in solution.
The spas of Europe and the United States with the greatest popularity
were those with thermal springs. Bathing in warm water has an undoubted
therapeutic effect as an aid to relaxation, although the skin does not
absorb any of the salts or gases. Sulfurated waters such as those at
Aachen, Ger., Baden, Austria, and White Sulphur Springs, W.Va., are
used for some skin conditions. Drinking mineral waters may, at the least,
provide a general washing out of the digestive system, and the alkaline
waters of Vichy, Fr., Ischia, Italy, and Mariánské Lázne,
Czech Republic, may act as purgative agents. The highly carbonated salt
springs at Saratoga Springs, N.Y., and at Wiesbaden and Baden-Baden,
Ger., have long been used for rheumatic and neuralgic conditions. Drinking
mineral water, carbonated or not, has become so popular that a considerable
business of bottling and exporting has grown up on both sides of the
Atlantic; it has a practical importance in aiding digestion that is
much greater than one would expect from its small mineral content.
It is likely, however, that most of the medicinal effects of spa therapy
result from the environmental factors of the location and facilities
of the spa. The beautiful town of Bath has the only thermal springs
in England, which usually yield more than 500,000 gallons daily at a
temperature of 120º F (49º C). The waters are drunk medicinally
and used for hydrotherapy treatments, and the Georgian Pump Room, with
its fountain, has long been a rendezvous for visitors who are "taking
the waters." Many European spas are located in forested alpine
settings such as Sankt Moritz, Switz., Évian-les-Bains, Fr.,
Badgastein, Austria, and Bormio, Italy. Japan has several thousand hot
springs, many of which have been converted into spas or public baths.
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