Neha Patil (Editor)

McKay Reservoir

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Type
  
reservoir

Primary outflows
  
McKay Creek

Max. length
  
2.2 miles (3.5 km)

Length
  
3.5 km

Primary inflows
  
McKay Creek

Basin countries
  
United States

Surface elevation
  
378 m

Width
  
800 m

McKay Reservoir httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Location
  
Umatilla County, Oregon

Primary inflow
  
McKay Creek National Wildlife Refuge

Similar
  
Agate Lake, Henry Hagg Lake, Pendleton Round‑Up and Happ, Emigrant Lake, Hat Rock State Park

McKay Reservoir is a reservoir in Umatilla County of the U.S. state of Oregon. It is an impoundment of McKay Creek, a tributary of the Umatilla River. The reservoir is located 6 miles (9.7 km) south of Pendleton on U.S. Route 395. The reservoir has a capacity of 65,534 acre feet (80,835,000 m3) of water. The reservoir and land that immediately surrounds it are designated as the McKay Creek National Wildlife Refuge. The reservoir and creek that it impounds are named for Dr. William C. McKay. McKay was an early settler in the Pendleton, Oregon area. He settled near the mouth of McKay Creek about 1851. The place was originally called Houtama. He died in Pendleton in 1893.

Contents

Map of McKay Reservoir, Oregon 97801, USA

HydrologyEdit

The McKay Dam was built between 1923–1927 as a project of the United States Bureau of Reclamation, part of the Umatilla Basin Project that had started in 1908 with the nearby Cold Springs Dam. It furnishes supplementary water to Stanfield and Westland Irrigation Districts.

The McKay Dam is an impoundment of McKay Creek, a tributary of the Umatilla River. An earth-fill dam with sections of reinforced concrete, it stands 158 feet high and has an active capacity of 71,534 acre feet (88,236,000 m3), of which 6,000 acre feet (7,400,000 m3) is used for exclusive flood control. The spillway section of the McKay Dam was modified 1978 through 1979 to increase the capacity from 10,000 to 27,000 cubic feet per second.

Natural historyEdit

The reservoir is jointly managed by the Bureau of Reclamation and the McKay Creek National Wildlife Refuge for irrigation water and a habitat for a variety wildlife including osprey, bald eagles, and an abundance of waterfowl. Fishing is permitted between March thorough September. McKay’s shallow water marshes and wetlands are also productive for warmwater fish such as rainbow trout, crappie, largemouth bass, sunfish, and yellow perch, as well as brown bullhead catfish, and lesser numbers of largemouth and smallmouth bass.

References

McKay Reservoir Wikipedia