Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Minidoka Dam

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Construction began
  
1904

Impounds
  
Snake River

Opened
  
1906

Area
  
2.59 km²

Create
  
Lake Walcott

Opening date
  
1906

Height
  
26 m

Length
  
1,364 m

Catchment area
  
5,778 km²

Minidoka Dam httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Location
  
Cassia / Minidoka counties, Idaho, USA

Operator(s)
  
U.S. Bureau of Reclamation

Spillway type
  
Gated and flashboard section

Similar
  
Snake River, Milner Dam, American Falls Dam, Palisades Dam, Arrowrock Dam

The Minidoka Dam is an earthfill dam on the Snake River in south central Idaho. The dam, originally completed in 1906, is east of Rupert on county highway 400; it is 86 feet (26 m) high and nearly a mile (1.6 km) in length, with a 2,400-foot (730 m) wide overflow spillway section. The dam and power plant were listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974. Walcott Park, close to the dam, is a popular summertime picnic area. Lake Walcott State Park and the headquarters for the Minidoka National Wildlife Refuge are adjacent to the dam.

Contents

Map of Minidoka Dam, Rupert, ID 83350, USA

HistoryEdit

The Minidoka dam was the first Reclamation Service project in Idaho, part of the Minidoka Project of dams, reservoirs and canals. Construction began in 1904 and by 1906 most of the dam's canals and laterals were finished. By 1909, Minidoka Dam's power plant, the first federal power plant in the northwest, was completed. By its completion, the total cost of the dam was $5.8 million, which exceeded estimates. The Minidoka project brought water into the southeastern areas of Idaho near the cities of Rupert and Burley. The project was successful, as what was once an uninhabited sagebrush desert is now bountiful farmland. The powerplant installation was significant as a precursor of much larger projects on the Columbia River, including Bonneville Dam.

A study examining the possibility of raising the crest of the dam by 5 feet (1.5 m) was conducted from 2000 to 2009, but with costs ranging from $150 million to $205 million the project has not been pursued. A $50 million spillway repair project is expected to go ahead.

Power plantEdit

The Minidoka Dam was initially designed and constructed without power generation facilities, but the Minidoka power plant was soon added in 1909-1910. It was designed to generate electricity for pumping operations to support irrigation on the south bank of the Snake River. While irrigation water could flow by gravity to the north bank, water for the south bank had to be raised to a higher elevation. Units 1-5 generated power using propellor-style units., but did not efficiently use the water volume passing through the dam. Unit 6, a 3MW unit with a Francis turbine, was added in 1927, with the 5.5 MW Unit 7 added in 1942. Units 1 - 5 were retired in 1995, before the construction of the Allen E. Inman Powerplant in 1997. The new plant houses Unit 8 and 9, each with a 10MW Kaplan horizontal unit. The original plant housing Units 1 -5 has been preserved and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Excess power from the original powerplant was sold to local farmers, making the Minidoka area one of the first rural areas to have an electric power distribution system.

StatisticsEdit

  • Provides supplemental water supply to more than 1 million acres (4000 km²) of land.
  • The reservoir has a storage capacity of 210,000 acre feet (260,000,000 m3).
  • The reservoir, Lake Walcott, is named after a Bureau of Reclamation engineer.
  • The reservoir extends 26 miles (42 km) up the Snake River and has a shoreline of 80 miles (130 km).
  • References

    Minidoka Dam Wikipedia