No. 2. A few feet from No. 1, 104°, discharges 1 gallon per minute.
No. 3. Twenty-five yards from the last, 106°, discharges two gallons per minute.
No. 4. Six yards above the last, 126°, discharges 2 gallons per minute.
Temperature of a spring issuing from the ground, at a considerable distance up the side of the hill, 64°.
Springs, No. 5, 6, and 7, 126°, 94°, 92°. These rise very near each other, the warmest being more elevated than the rest; the three discharge about 8 gallons per minute.
No. 8. Issuing from the ground, fifty feet above the level of the creek, uniting, as it rises, with another at 54°; temperature of the mixture, 128°, discharge of the two, 10 gallons per minute.
No. 9. Rising on the point of a small spur, sixty feet above the level of the creek, 132°, discharges two gallons per minute.
No. 10. Forty feet above the creek, 151°, discharges 10 gallons per minute. Green bushes in the edge of this, which is the hottest spring.
No. 11. Three feet above the creek, 148°, discharges 12 gallons per minute.
No. 12. Twenty yards above the last, 132°, discharges 20 gallons per minute.