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Imperial Dam

Coordinates: 32°52′59″N 114°27′54″W / 32.883°N 114.465°W / 32.883; -114.465
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Imperial Dam
Imperial Dam is located in the United States
Imperial Dam
Location of Imperial Dam in the United States
Imperial Dam is located in Arizona
Imperial Dam
Imperial Dam (Arizona)
Official nameImperial Diversion Dam
LocationLower Colorado River Valley
Imperial County, California
Yuma County, Arizona
Coordinates32°52′59″N 114°27′54″W / 32.883°N 114.465°W / 32.883; -114.465
Construction began1936; 88 years ago (1936)
Opening date1938; 86 years ago (1938)
Owner(s)United States Bureau of Reclamation
Operator(s)Imperial Irrigation District
Dam and spillways
ImpoundsColorado River
Height85 ft (26 m)
Length3,475 ft (1,059 m)
Width (base)76 ft (23 m)
Reservoir
CreatesImperial Reservoir
Total capacity160,000 acre⋅ft (200,000,000 m3) (now silted)
Surface area5,756 acres (2,329 ha)

The Imperial Diversion Dam (National ID # CA10159) is a concrete slab and buttress, ogee weir structure across the California/Arizona border, 18 miles (29 km) northeast of Yuma. Completed in 1938, the dam retains the waters of the Colorado River into the Imperial Reservoir before desilting and diversion into the All-American Canal and the Gila Project aqueduct. Between 1932 and 1940, the Imperial Irrigation District (IID) relied on the Inter-California Canal and the Imperial Canal and Alamo River.

Background

The Imperial Dam was built with three sections; the gates of each section hold back the water to help divert the water towards the desilting plant. Three giant desilting basins and seventy-two 770 ft (230 m) scrapers hold and desilt the water; the removed silt is carried away by six sludge-pipes running under the Colorado River that dump the sediment into the California sluiceway, which returns the silt to the Colorado River. The water is now directed back towards one of the three sections which divert the water into one of the three channels. About 90% of the volume of the Colorado River is diverted into the canals at this location. Diversions can top 40,000 cubic feet (1,100 m3) per second, roughly the volume of the Susquehanna River and more than 50 times the flow of the Rio Grande[citation needed].

The Gila project aqueduct branches off towards Arizona while the All-American canal branches southwards for 37 miles (60 km) before reaching its headworks on the California border and bends west towards the Imperial Valley.

References

  • Bureau of Reclamation (29 June 2009). "Imperial Diversion Dam". U.S. Department of the Interior. Archived from the original on 2011-06-14. Retrieved 2009-09-22.
  • "Imperial Diversion, California". FindLakes. 2009. Archived from the original on 2011-07-26. Retrieved 2009-09-17.