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Posts Tagged ‘hoover dam’

Boulder Canyon Project

Wednesday, December 19th, 2018

December 19, 2018

On Dec. 21, 1928, 90 years ago this Friday, United States President  Calvin Coolidge signed the Boulder Canyon Project Act that authorized the building of the Hoover Dam. The dam, which was named for Coolidge’s successor as president, Herbert Hoover, is one of the highest concrete dams in the world. It stands in the Black Canyon of the Colorado River on the Arizona-Nevada border. The Boulder Canyon Project included the construction of a hydroelectric power plant, a reservoir, and later the Mike O’Callaghan-Pat Tillman Memorial Bridge. The Boulder Canyon Project supplies water and electric power for much of the Pacific Southwest.

Hoover Dam, one of the world's highest concrete dams, stands in the Black Canyon of the Colorado River. It controls flooding and supplies water and electric power for much of the U.S. Pacific Southwest. The dam's completion formed Lake Mead, the largest artificial lake in the United States. The Mike O'Callaghan-Pat Tillman Memorial Bridge spans the canyon just south of the dam. Credit: U.S. Department of Transportation

The Boulder Canyon Project Act of 1928 authorized the construction of Hoover Dam, one of the world’s highest concrete dams. The Mike O’Callaghan-Pat Tillman Memorial Bridge spans the canyon just south of the dam. Credit: U.S. Department of Transportation

Hoover Dam stands about 25 miles (40 kilometers) southeast of Las Vegas, Nevada. Hundreds of thousands of people visit the dam each year. The dam is 726 feet (221 meters) high and 1,244 feet (379 meters) long. Elevators descend the equivalent of 44 stories into the dam. But they still do not reach its base. The concrete base is 660 feet (200 meters) thick. It contains enough concrete to pave a two-lane highway from New York City to San Francisco. Water falling through the huge turbines of the dam generates electric power. The power is sold to industries and to cities in the Pacific Southwest. The power plant has a capacity of about 2 million kilowatts.

Click to view larger image The Boulder Canyon Project Act of 1928 authorized the building of the Hoover Dam, one of the highest dams in the world, in the United States. It also provided for the building of a hydroelectric power plant and a reservoir. This system now controls floods of the Colorado River and supplies water and electric power for much of the Pacific Southwest. The first page of the Boulder Canyon Project Act is shown here. Credit: National Archives

Click to view larger image
The Boulder Canyon Project Act of 1928 authorized the building of the Hoover Dam. The first page of the act is shown here. Credit: National Archives

Lake Mead, the dam reservoir, is one of the world’s largest artificially created bodies of water. It is about 115 miles (185 kilometers) long and 589 feet (180 meters) deep. The reservoir stores approximately 28 million acre-feet (35 billion cubic meters) of water. Water from Lake Mead can irrigate about 1 million acres (400,000 hectares) of farmland in the three-state area. The reservoir also supplies water for cities in southern California.

Click to view larger image This map shows the location of Lake Mead, a large artificial lake on the Arizona-Nevada border. The lake was created by the completion of Hoover Dam on the Colorado River in 1936. The lake is surrounded by the Lake Mead National Recreation Area. Credit: WORLD BOOK map

Click to view larger image
This map shows the location of Lake Mead, a large artificial lake on the Arizona-Nevada border. The lake was created by the completion of Hoover Dam on the Colorado River. Credit: WORLD BOOK map

The need for a dam on the Colorado River was apparent in the early 1900′s. Floods were causing much damage in the Palo Verde Valley and in the Imperial Valley. Extensive levees were built. But crops died when the river ran too low to meet the area’s irrigation needs. In 1928, Congress approved the Boulder Canyon Project. The Bureau of Reclamation designed the dam and supervised its construction. The entire project cost about $385 million. The dam itself cost about $165 million. Hoover Dam was completed in 1935.

Tags: arizona, boulder canyon project, calvin coolidge, herbert hoover, hoover dam, lake mead, nevada
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