
Reclamation is the largest wholesale water supplier and the second largest producer of hydroelectric power in the United States, with operations and facilities in the 17 Western States.
Earth Day might be over, but we appreciate our public lands every day of the year. Here is a stunning sunset over Grand Teton National Park.
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A pair of kayaks take in a beautiful sunrise over Lake Superior as they wait for their paddlers in Isle Royale National Park in Michigan.
Photo:...
Students Experience a “Day in the Desert”
On April 4, teachers and fifty-eight 7th graders from Sunrise Ridge Intermediate School traded their...
Lets start the week off right with a gorgeous sunrise photo at Tipsoo Pond in Mt. Rainier National Park, Washington.
Photo: Bob Kim
Lizard and bird and dragonfly…oh my! Here are the winners in the wildlife (non-mammal) category of the BLM New Mexico employee photo contest.
2 posts tagged Jamestown Dam
A beaver damaged tree at Jamestown Dam, the beaver was seen swimming away from its handiwork before the photo was taken. Photo by Ken Lake, Reclamation.
Looking down relief well #5 at Jamestown Dam. Jamestown Dam is a zoned, rolled earthfill structure with a structural height of 110 feet. The spillway is a morning-glory inlet leading to a 9.5-foot-diameter concrete conduit near the right abutment of the dam with a capacity of 2,930 cubic feet per second. The outlet works, near the left abutment of the dam, are controlled by two 5- by 6-foot high-pressure slide gates with a capacity of 2,990 cubic feet per second, and discharge into a 13.5-foot high, horseshoe-shaped concrete tunnel. The reservoir has a total storage capacity of 220,978 acre-feet from streambed to elevation 1454.0, the top of exclusive flood control, of which 185,435 acre-feet are for flood control. http://www.usbr.gov/projects/Facility.jsp?fac_Name=Jamestown+Dam
Photo by Randy Ehlis, DKAO, U.S. Bureau ofReclamation
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