Flaming Gorge Dam, Utah

This photograph of mine is being used in Water: Utah's most precious resource, an educational desktop background program installed on state owned public computers in school districts, Universities, and public offices and created by the Utah Water Research Laboratory at Utah State University in Logan.

You can see all the photos and their captions as used in the project here.

(Project photo credits page)

The Flaming Gorge Dam  is a concrete thin-arch dam in the Flaming Gorge of the Green River, a major tributary of the Colorado River, in the U.S. state of Utah.

One of the largest dams in the American West, Flaming Gorge Dam forms the Flaming Gorge Reservoir, which extends 91 miles (146 km) into southern Wyoming, submerging four distinct gorges of the Green River. The dam stores water for the Colorado River Storage Project, which stores and distributes upper Colorado River Basin water. The dam's hydroelectric power plant generates 151.5 MW.

Situated in Flaming Gorge, a canyon of the Green River named by John Wesley Powell, the dam was built and is operated by the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation. Groundbreaking for the structure began in 1958 and was completed in 1964. The completed structure is 502 feet (153 m) high and 1,180 feet (360 m) long, with three hydroelectric generators.

With no fish ladders, elevators or any means of passage for aquatic species, the dam has severely hurt native species. By creating a standing-water pool on a sediment-laden river, the dam has caused the lower Green to lose its sediment load and decrease in temperature, further hurting the native ecosystem.

 
Previous
Previous

Photographs from a visit to Istanbul

Next
Next

My video of a Canadian chipmunk on NBC's Rock Center with Brian Williams (video 00:18)