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Stephens Creek Dam

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Country
  
Australia

Status
  
Operational

Type of dam
  
Embankment dam

Catchment area
  
512 km²

Owner
  
Essential Energy

Purpose
  
Potable water supply

Opening date
  
1892

Height
  
15 m

Surface area
  
8.5 km²

Stephens Creek Dam

Location
  
Far West, New South Wales

Similar
  
Spring Creek Dam, Balmain Reservoir, Fitzroy Falls Dam, Wingecarribee Dam, Winburndale Dam

The Stephens Creek Dam is an earth-filled embankment dam built on a rock foundation with an uncontrolled spillway across the Stephens Creek, located in the Far West region of New South Wales, Australia. The principal purpose of the dam is to supply potable water for the town of Broken Hill. The impounded 2,000-megalitre (71×10^6 cu ft) reservoir is called Stephens Creek Reservoir.

Location and features

The dam was completed in 1892 by the Broken Hill Water Supply Company to provide a continuing water source for drought-ridden Broken Hill. The reservoir soon became inadequate and a further reservoir, Umberumberka, was built to add to the water supply. Stephens Creek Reservoir remains the primary water source for Broken Hill, a city of around 20,000 people and is a popular picnic area.

The height of the dam wall is 15 metres (49 ft), and 140 metres (460 ft) in length. The earth-filled embankment wall is 112×10^3 m3 (4.0×10^6 cu ft) by volume. The uncontrolled spillway discharges overflow at the rate of 900 cubic metres per second (32,000 cu ft/s). The reservoir has a maximum storage capacity of 2,000 megalitres (71×10^6 cu ft), over a surface area of 8.5 square kilometres (3.3 sq mi), and drawn from a catchment area of 510 square kilometres (200 sq mi).

The facility is owned and operated by Essential Energy, which, prior to 2004 was Australian Inland Energy and Water.

References

Stephens Creek Dam Wikipedia