How many of you like bathing in  hot spring? How many of you have been to the place listed below. Don’t  miss them if you have a chance to see those amazing places.
1.Grand Prismatic Spring
The Grand Prismatic Spring in Yellowstone National Park is the largest hot spring in the United States, and the third largest in the world, next to those in New Zealand. It is located in the Midway Geyser Basin.The vivid colors in the spring are the result of pigmented bacteria in the microbial mats that grow around the edges of the mineral-rich water. The bacteria produce colors ranging from green to red; the amount of color in the microbial mats depends on the ratio of chlorophyll to carotenoids. In the summer, the mats tend to be orange and red, whereas in the winter the mats are usually dark green. The center of the pool is sterile due to extreme heat.
  
1.Grand Prismatic Spring
The Grand Prismatic Spring in Yellowstone National Park is the largest hot spring in the United States, and the third largest in the world, next to those in New Zealand. It is located in the Midway Geyser Basin.The vivid colors in the spring are the result of pigmented bacteria in the microbial mats that grow around the edges of the mineral-rich water. The bacteria produce colors ranging from green to red; the amount of color in the microbial mats depends on the ratio of chlorophyll to carotenoids. In the summer, the mats tend to be orange and red, whereas in the winter the mats are usually dark green. The center of the pool is sterile due to extreme heat.
  
2.  Mammoth Hot Springs
Mammoth is a large hill of  travertine that has been created over thousands of years as hot water  from the spring cooled and deposited calcium carbonate. Terrace Mountain  at Mammoth Hot Springs is the largest known carbonate-depositing spring  in the world. The most famous feature at the springs is the Minerva  Terrace, a series of travertine terraces. The terraces have been  deposited by the spring over many years, but due to recent minor  earthquake activity, the spring vent has shifted, rendering the terraces  dry.
3.  Blood Pond Hot Spring
Blood Pond Hot Spring is one of  the “hells” (jigoku) of Beppu, Japan — nine spectacular natural hot  springs that are more for viewing rather than bathing. The “blood pond  hell” features a pond of hot, red water, colored as such by iron in the  waters. It’s allegedly the most photogenic of the nine hells.
4.  Blue Lagoon
The Blue Lagoon geothermal spa  is one of the most visited attractions in Iceland.The warm waters are  rich in minerals like silica and sulfur and bathing in the Blue Lagoon  is reputed to help some people suffering from skin diseases such as  psoriasis
5.Glenwood  Springs
Glenwood Springs, Colorado is  home to the world’s largest Hot Springs Swimming Pool
6.  Jigokudani Monkey Park
Japan’s Jigokudani Monkey Park  is in Yamanouchi, Shimotakai District, Nagano Prefecture. It is part of  the Joshinetsu Kogen National Park. The name Jigokudani, meaning “Hell’s  Valley”, is due to the steam and boiling water that bubbles out of  small crevices in the frozen ground, surrounded by steep cliffs and  formidably cold and hostile forests.
It is famous for its large  population of wild Japanese Macaques (Macaca fuscata), more commonly  referred to as Snow Monkeys, that go to the valley during the winter,  foraging elsewhere in the national park during the warmer months.  Starting in 1963, the monkeys descend from the steep cliffs and forest  to sit in the warm waters of the onsen (hotsprings), and return to the  security of the forests in the evenings.
7.  Deildartunguhver
Deildartunguhver is a hotspring  in Reykholtsdalur, Iceland. It is characterized by a very high flow  rate for a hot spring (180 liters/second) and water emerges at 97 °C. It  is the highest-flow hot spring in Europe.


















