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- Q5558426 subject Q6424343.
- Q5558426 subject Q8499277.
- Q5558426 subject Q8581471.
- Q5558426 subject Q8799312.
- Q5558426 subject Q8806593.
- Q5558426 abstract "Giant Springs is a large first magnitude spring located near Great Falls, Montana and is the central feature of Giant Springs State Park. Its water has a constant temperature of 54 °F (12 °C) and originates from snowmelt in the Little Belt Mountains, 60 miles (97 km) away. According to chlorofluorocarbon dating, the water takes 26 years to travel underground before returning to the surface at the springs.Giant Springs is formed by an opening in a part of the Madison aquifer, a vast aquifer underlying 5 U.S. States and 3 Canadian Provinces. The conduit between the mountains and the spring is the geological stratum found in parts of the northwest United States called the Madison Limestone. Although some of the underground water from the Little Belt Mountains escapes to form Giant Springs, some stays underground and continues flowing, joining sources from losing streams in the Black Hills, Big Horn Mountains and other areas. The aquifer eventually surfaces in Canada. Giant Springs has an average discharge of 242 cubic feet (6.9 m3) of water per second.The spring outlet is located in Giant Springs State Park, just downstream and northeast of Great Falls, Montana on the east bank of the Missouri River. Giant Springs was first described by Lewis and Clark during their exploration of the Louisiana Purchase in 1805. Before that, the Blackfeet people utilized the springs as an easy-to-access water source in the winter. The springs were mostly ignored by settlers until 1884 when the town of Great Falls was established and the springs became the place for Sunday recreational activities. In the mid-1970s the park was established as a Montana State Park.Today, some of the spring water is bottled annually for human consumption and some of the discharge is used for a trout hatchery. The hatchery is a Montana state trout hatchery named Giant Springs Trout Hatchery and raises mostly Rainbow Trout. The spring serves as the headwaters of the 200-foot (61 m)-long Roe River, once listed as the shortest river in the world according to Guinness Book of World Records. The river flows into the Missouri River which is near the spring and borders its state park.".
- Q5558426 city Q466190.
- Q5558426 discharge "6.852676875506".
- Q5558426 district Q193167.
- Q5558426 length "64.37376".
- Q5558426 mouthElevation "1010.1072".
- Q5558426 mouthMountain Q466190.
- Q5558426 mouthPlace Q466190.
- Q5558426 riverMouth Q5419.
- Q5558426 synonym "Big Spring".
- Q5558426 synonym "Wonderful Spring".
- Q5558426 thumbnail Giant_Springs03.JPG?width=300.
- Q5558426 wikiPageExternalLink giant-springs.
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- Q5558426 wikiPageWikiLink Q466190.
- Q5558426 wikiPageWikiLink Q505802.
- Q5558426 wikiPageWikiLink Q5419.
- Q5558426 wikiPageWikiLink Q5558426.
- Q5558426 wikiPageWikiLink Q6424343.
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- Q5558426 wikiPageWikiLink Q6649061.
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- Q5558426 wikiPageWikiLink Q8499277.
- Q5558426 wikiPageWikiLink Q8581471.
- Q5558426 wikiPageWikiLink Q8799312.
- Q5558426 wikiPageWikiLink Q8806593.
- Q5558426 wikiPageWikiLink Q960800.
- Q5558426 city Q466190.
- Q5558426 dischargeImperial "242".
- Q5558426 district Q193167.
- Q5558426 lengthImperial "0.04".
- Q5558426 mouthElevationImperial "3314".
- Q5558426 mouthLocation Q466190.
- Q5558426 mouthName Q5419.
- Q5558426 name "Giant Springs".
- Q5558426 otherName "Big Spring".
- Q5558426 otherName "Wonderful Spring".
- Q5558426 point "47.534166666666664 -111.23".
- Q5558426 type BodyOfWater.
- Q5558426 type Place.
- Q5558426 type RiverBodyOfWater.
- Q5558426 type BodyOfWater.
- Q5558426 type Location.
- Q5558426 type NaturalPlace.
- Q5558426 type Place.
- Q5558426 type River.
- Q5558426 type Stream.
- Q5558426 type Thing.
- Q5558426 type SpatialThing.
- Q5558426 type Q4022.
- Q5558426 type Q47521.
- Q5558426 comment "Giant Springs is a large first magnitude spring located near Great Falls, Montana and is the central feature of Giant Springs State Park. Its water has a constant temperature of 54 °F (12 °C) and originates from snowmelt in the Little Belt Mountains, 60 miles (97 km) away.".
- Q5558426 label "Giant Springs".
- Q5558426 lat "47.534166666666664".
- Q5558426 long "-111.23".
- Q5558426 depiction Giant_Springs03.JPG.
- Q5558426 homepage giant-springs.
- Q5558426 name "Giant Springs".