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New Melones Lake

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Arden (talk | contribs) at 02:05, 20 June 2007 (→‎References: Updated Recreation.gov link & added NML website link). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

New Melones Lake
LocationCalifornia
Typereservoir
Basin countriesUnited States
Surface area50.58 km²

New Melones Lake is an artificial lake in the central Sierra Nevada foothills of California. It is a reservoir behind the New Melones Dam on the Stanislaus River between the cities of Angels Camp and Sonora. The reservoir has a capacity of 2.4 million acre-feet (3.0 km³) with a surface area of 50.58 km². When it is full it has a shoreline of approximately 100 miles (160 km).

History

The Stanislaus River and environs experienced dramatic changes beginning with the Gold Rush. The site of the reservoir is at the very heart of Gold Country, and development began there with the arrival of the miners in the 1840s. Water was immediately diverted, the riverbeds scoured for gold, and the banks colonized by miners and the businesses that served them. By 1900 the flowing water was used to create electricity. Some of it was channeled out for use in agriculture. The original Melones Dam was built in 1926.

The New Melones Project was authorized in 1944 to create a much larger reservoir and to establish a new hydroelectric plant. It would also be specifically designed to prevent floods. It was a controversial issue. The dam's opponents argued that its presence would inundate the river valley, eliminate the natural whitewater rapids, flood many of the massive unique limestone cave formations characteristic of the area, and destroy archaeological resources found along the river. Initial archaeological surveys were made by the Smithsonian River Basin Surveys in 1948 (Fredrickson 1949). Further surveys were done by regional universities. The consensus after the surveys was that the dam would be built. Upon the dam's completion, the valley filled with water, covering the old mining town of Melones and the original Melones Dam.

The lake was constructed by the US Army Corps of Engineers and transferred to the Bureau of Reclamation shortly after its completion in 1980. Cultural resources affected by the project were transferred to the Department of the Interior with the Heritage Conservation and Recreation Services (HCRS, a short-lived organization that was established during the Carter administration) responsible for the archaeological mitigation program. New Melones is a unit of the Central Valley Project.

Uses

Today New Melones Lake provides irrigation water, hydroelectric power, flood control, wildlife habitat, fishing, camping, boating, and other recreation as part of the Glory Hole Recreation Area.

References