Hot Springs, city, seat (1882) of Fall River county, southwestern South Dakota, U.S. It lies along the Fall River in a canyon walled by red rocks, in the southern Black Hills, about 50 miles (80 km) south of Rapid City. Sioux and Cheyenne Indians were once frequent visitors to the area’s warm mineral springs, which were reputed to have healing properties. Settled in 1879 as Minnekahta (a Sioux word meaning “Hot Waters”), it was renamed Hot Springs in 1882 and developed as a health resort. A large natural-warm-water indoor pool built in 1890, the Evans Plunge, remains a tourist attraction. The city’s economy depends on ranching, tourism, and a veterans home and medical centre. The Mammoth Site, discovered in 1974, is a sinkhole that entrapped dozens of mammoths and other animals some 26,000 years ago. The bones have been left where they were found, and ongoing excavations can be observed by visitors. Wind Cave National Park and Custer State Park are a few miles north and Angostura Dam, Reservoir, and Recreation Area a few miles southeast. Hot Springs is bordered to the west and south by Black Hills National Forest. Buffalo Gap National Grassland, of which Hot Springs is a district headquarters, is to the south and east. Also in the area are Badlands National Park and Jewel Cave National Monument. The Black Hills Wild Horse Sanctuary, about 15 miles (25 km) south of the city, is a refuge for wild mustangs. Inc. 1882. Pop. (2000) 4,129; (2010) 3,711.