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Ute Dam

Coordinates: 35°20′42″N 103°26′41″W / 35.34494°N 103.44478°W / 35.34494; -103.44478
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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 24.248.245.202 (talk) at 18:18, 31 August 2016 (The damn is not used for irrigation storage. The damn was built for municipal water use for Curry, Roosevelt and Quay County in NM.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Ute Dam, with accordion spillway in foreground

Ute Dam (National ID # NM00293) is a dam at Logan, New Mexico in Quay County, about 20 miles (32 km) west of the Texas state line.

The earthen dam was completed in 1963 by the New Mexico Interstate Stream Commission, without federal funding, and with a height of 132 feet (40 m) and a length of 6,530 feet (1,990 m) at its crest.[1] It impounds the Canadian River for municipal water use. The dam is owned and operated by the Commission, which is authorized under state law to implement projects and negotiate with neighboring states on water issues.[2] Ute Reservoir is the only large state-owned and operated reservoir in New Mexico.[3]

Structurally the Ute Dam has the largest labyrinth weir spillway in the United States. It was a 1984 addition to the original structure, designed by the United States Bureau of Reclamation, which raised the height of the lake by 27 feet (8.2 m).[4]

The reservoir it creates, Ute Reservoir, has a water surface of 8,200 acres (3,300 ha) and has a maximum capacity of 403,000 acre-feet (497,000,000 m3).[5] Recreation includes fishing for largemouth bass, catfish, crappie and walleye, and the facilities at the adjacent Ute Lake State Park.

References

35°20′42″N 103°26′41″W / 35.34494°N 103.44478°W / 35.34494; -103.44478