Albuquerque Journal

Valles Caldera acquires site with volcanic features

Sulphur Springs is home to mudpots, fumaroles and more

- BY MARK OSWALD JOURNAL NORTH

SANTA FE — A 40-acre site that includes such volcanic features as steaming mudpots, sulfuric-acid hot springs and fumaroles — openings that emit steam and gases — has been acquired by the Valles Caldera National Preserve in the Jemez Mountains.

Valles Caldera officials said the acquisitio­n of Sulphur Springs “was critical to preserving the breadth of geothermal features” in the Valles Caldera.

The property also supports a range of “extremophi­le” algae and bacteria living in high-temperatur­e acidic pool and stream environmen­ts.

“As the only place in the state of New Mexico with geothermal features such as mudpots and fumaroles, this site has the potential to become a primary location to educate the public about Valles Caldera’s geologic origins and status as a dormant, but not extinct, volcano,” said preserve superinten­dent Jorge Silva-Bañuelos in a news release.

Sulphur Springs is on the western edge of the preserve, northwest of the visitors center off N.M. 4. It’s in a remote location on Sulfur Canyon, but maps show U.S. Forest Service or hunting route roads that run to the site.

Wednesday’s announceme­nt said public access and visitation to Sulphur Springs will remain limited while the National Park Service conducts formal surveys of natural and cultural resources, restores the site from previous mining activ

ity, eliminates safety hazards and develops visitor-related infrastruc­ture.

In 2016, the property was purchased by the Heritage Partnershi­p Trust in a deal facilitate­d by the National Parks Conservati­on Associatio­n (NPCA). The Heritage Partnershi­p held the property pending sale to the Park Service.

Funds for the final $500,000 purchase were provided by the federal Land and Water Conservati­on Fund, the National Park Trust, the Eugene V. and Clare E. Thaw Charitable Trust, the Cornell Douglas Foundation, an anonymous donor, and Frances H. Kennedy, whose contributi­on was in honor of her late husband, former National Park Service Director Roger G. Kennedy.

“My wife, Kathryn Mullen, and I are pleased we could provide protection of Sulphur Springs from developmen­t until the U.S. government could purchase this unique ecosystem,” Russell Scott of the Heritage Partnershi­p Trust said in a statement.

“We are dedicated to protecting wildlands and its wildlife, and welcomed the opportunit­y to be of service to the future of the preserve.”

Sulphur Springs was patented in 1898 as a mining claim by New Mexico businessma­n and politician Maríano Otero, who mined sulphur there from 1902 to 1904. The Otero family then developed the site as a health resort spa, which operated until it burned down in the 1970s. Google Earth identifies parts of the site with such colorful names as “Lemonade Spring,” “Laxitive Spring” and “Kidney and Stomach Trouble Spring.”

The property later passed to several private owners. In the late 1980s, Los Alamos National Laboratory establishe­d an experiment­al geothermal well on the site and a few residents occupied the property into the early 2000s.

U.S. Sen. Martin Heinrich said in Wednesday’s news release that public access to Sulphur Springs “will help cement Valles Caldera’s reputation as ‘New Mexico’s Yellowston­e.’ ”

 ?? COURTESY OF VALLES CALDERA ?? The 40-acre site known as Sulphur Springs has been added to the Valles Caldera National Preserve. It contains such volcanic features as sulfuric-acid hot springs, volcanic fumaroles and steaming mud pots.
COURTESY OF VALLES CALDERA The 40-acre site known as Sulphur Springs has been added to the Valles Caldera National Preserve. It contains such volcanic features as sulfuric-acid hot springs, volcanic fumaroles and steaming mud pots.
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