WELDON SPRING

Named for John

Weldon, who settled

this area in 1789.

This spring pumps

28,800 gal/day and

has an average temp.

of 53º F.

This is one of a hundred bunkers found in the August A. Busch Conservation Area . These were designed to safely store high explosives. Each bunker is at a distance from its neighbors, which would limit damage caused by inadvertent explosions.A heavy steel door into one of the bunkers.The interior of this bunker is filled with detritus. The interior of my own house isn't much better.As a conservation area, this land is thick with wildlife, and is popular with hunters, hikers, fishermen, and nature photographers. And on this particular day, there were cross-country runners here; I felt quite sorry for them, since they were engulfed in white dust, kicked up from the dry gravel roads by each passing vehicle.In the mid-1950s, this land was transfered to the U.S. Atomic Energy Administration, and uranium ore was processed here until 1966. This generated a large amount of radioactive waste. A subsequent clean-up effort collected the waste from various pits and put them under a large mound or cell, seen in the background of this photo:This mound is variously reported as being 47, 51, and 60 acres in size, and visitors can climb to the top of it. An aerial view of it, courtesy of Google Maps, gives a better idea of its scale:The cell is covered with limestone rubble, and was designed to last a thousand years.There is still radiological and chemical contamination in the ground. The level of radiation in waters flowing from some local springs is several times higher than federal standards, but is declining. These levels are likely not particularly harmful; however, excavation and the use of shallow ground waters in this area is restricted.The Weldon Spring Site is not actually in the town of Weldon Spring, but is near it; and that town was actually named after a spring once owned by someone named Weldon. And this spring still exists.The spring is in a gully at the northeast corner of Highway 40 and Route 94, below an historic U.C.C. church and cemetery. The spring run, like those of most larger springs in the region, contains watercress. Due to local geology, this particular spring is not contaminated from the old Weldon Spring Ordnance Works.Springs have fascinated me since I was a child, when I would visit Alley Spring and Big Spring in the Ozarks with my family. However, they are usually difficult to photograph well.A wooden sign above the spring reads:Springs in Missouri typically have a near-constant water temperature close to the average air temperature, and there are likely no hot springs in the state. A National Weather Service forecast office, located only one mile to the south of here, reports an average annual air temperature of about 54 degrees Fahrenheit. The reported spring flow of 28,800 gallons per day, which is about a third of a gallon per second, was easily exceeded on this particular day.