Big Bend Dam

Big Bend Dam is a major rolled earth dam along the Missouri River in central South Dakota. The dam, 95 feet high and 10,570 feet in length, was constructed as part of the Pick-Sloan Plan for Missouri watershed development authorized by the Flood Control Act of 1944. Construction began in 1959 and the embankment completed in July 1963. Power generation began at the facility in 1964 and the entire complex was complted in 1966 at a total cost of $107 million. The hydroelectric plant presently generates 493,300 kilowatts of electricity and meets peak-hour demand for power within the Missouri River Basin. Located near Fort Thompson, South Dakota, just sound of a major bend in the Missouri River (from which the dam takes its name), Big Bend Dam creates Lake Sharpe, named after South Dakota Governor Merrill Q. Sharpe. The lake entends for 80 miles up the course of the Missouri River past Pierre to Oahe Dam, another major power-generating and flood control embankment. Lake Sharpe covers a total of 56,884 acres and drains an area just under 250,000 sq. mi.

External link

* Big Bend Project Homepage - U.S. Army Corps of Engineers

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
xeak
joe rinoie
hippocrates smethwyck
neodys
xelo
dr. edwin franko goldman
drogba
polls u.s. presidential election 2008
external sorting
camucia
dana love
xepn
divis
orme (disambiguation)
elemi
north wales and liverpool railway
lower jurassic
north wales wildlife trust
vermilion sands
nk zrinjski mostar
xet
ciguatera fish poisoning
xent
hms polychrest
university of new brunswick engineering undergraduate society
radio silence
xexo
sharon, lois & bram
baker lake, nunavut
personal liberty law
xefw
eurocypria airlines
enter (magazine)
match moving
passport to eternity
edo van belkom
diavik diamond mine
john wayles eppes
bulgarian passport
massacre of lambing flat
babidi saga
irish verbs
jacob sullum
wbtw tv