Hot Springs Near Geyser Bight is a natural thermal spring in Alaska, described in the USGS inventory as hot but without an exact temperature on record. Location and safety notes are below.
This listing comes from the USGS/NOAA thermal-springs inventory (a reference dataset compiled from records dating to the 1960s–1980s). It does not include ownership, developed-vs-primitive status, or access rights. Many U.S. thermal springs sit on private, tribal, or protected land, or are undeveloped and unsafe — always verify legal access and current conditions with the land manager before visiting, and follow Leave No Trace.
Approximate location: 53.21, -168.44 (Alaska). This marks the USGS-recorded spring area, not a trailhead, parking spot, or public access point — many springs are on private, tribal, or protected land. Confirm legal access before visiting.
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Common questions
Frequently Asked Questions
The USGS inventory lists Hot Springs Near Geyser Bight as hot but does not record an exact temperature.
We can't say. HotSpringIndex classifies water temperature from public USGS data; it is not a safety clearance. Access, ownership, water depth, footing, and current temperature all matter — verify them with the land manager before visiting.
Hot Springs Near Geyser Bight is a thermal spring in Alaska, near 53.21, -168.44. Many springs are on private or protected land — confirm access before you go.
Location and temperature from the USGS/NOAA Thermal Springs List for the United States (a historical reference inventory, 1965–1980). The temperature is a maximum surface reading, not a soaking-pool temperature, and can vary by season — see our methodology. This is a temperature classification, not a safety clearance: hot-spring water can scald, springs can sit on private or closed land, and conditions change. Verify access and safety with the land manager, and follow Leave No Trace.