Gravity dam
A gravity dam is a dam constructed from concrete or stone masonry and designed to hold back water by utilizing the weight of the material alone to resist the horizontal pressure of water pushing against it. Gravity dams are designed so that each section of the dam is stable, independent of any other dam section.[1][2]
The most common classification of gravity dams is by the materials composing the structure:
- Concrete dams include
- mass concrete dams, made of:
- conventional concrete: Dworshak Dam, Grand Coulee Dam
- roller-compacted concrete: Willow Creek Dam (Oregon), Upper Stillwater Dam
- masonry: Pathfinder Dam, Cheesman Dam
- hollow gravity dams, made of reinforced concrete: Braddock Dam
- mass concrete dams, made of:
Composite dams are a combination of concrete and embankment dams.[citation needed] Construction materials of composite dams are the same used for concrete and embankment dams.
Gravity dams can be classified by plan (shape):
- Most gravity dams are straight (Grand Coulee Dam).
- Some masonry and concrete gravity dams have the dam axis curved (Shasta Dam, Cheesman Dam) to add stability through arch action.[3]
Gravity dams can be classified with respect to their structural height:
- Low, up to 100 feet.
- Medium high, between 100 and 300 feet.
- High, over 300 feet.
References
Bibliography
- Kollgaardand, E.B.; Chadwick, W.L. (1988). Development of Dam Engineering in the United States. US Committee of the International Commission on Large
Dams. {{cite book}}
: line feed character in |publisher=
at position 55 (help)
- Dams of the United States - Pictorial display of Landmark Dams. Denver, Colorado: US Society on Dams. 2013.
{{cite book}}
: line feed character in|title=
at position 59 (help)