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Numerical data in tables

The Four Lower Snake River Dams

Improving Salmon Passage, February 2002
Army Corps of Engineers, Walla Walla District

Lower Granite Dam (USACE Digital Visual Library) The Snake River is the principal tributary to the Columbia River, draining approximately 109,000 square miles in Idaho, Wyoming, Utah, Nevada, Washington, and Oregon. Flows in the lower Snake River are highest in the spring (average annual peak of approximately 165,000 cubic feet per second) and lowest in late summer (averaging 25,000 cubic feet per second). The Lower Snake River Project features four locks and dams in the state of Washington: Ice Harbor Dam, Lower Monumental Dam, Little Goose Dam, and Lower Granite Dam. The dams became operational between 1961 and 1975. The four dams are all run-of-river facilities, which means that they have limited storage capacity in their reservoirs and pass water through the dam at about the same rate as it enters the reservoir. All four of these dams are multiple-use facilities that provide navigation, hydropower, irrigation (pumped from reservoir behind Ice Harbor Dam), recreation, and fish and wildlife conservation benefits. These dams were not built to control floods.

Juvenile fish from the lower Snake River drainage system may have to travel past as many as eight Federal dams before reaching the Pacific Ocean.

The Four Lower Snake River Dams
from www.cbr.washington.edu/crisp/hydro/

  Lower Granite Dam Little Goose Dam Lower Monumental Dam Ice Harbor Dam
Miles from
Columbia River
107.5 70.3 41.6 9.7
Construction Date 1975 (units 1-3)
1978 (units 4-6)
1970 (units 1-3)
1978 (units 4-6)
1969 (units 1-3)
1981 (units 4-6)
1962 (units 1-3)
1976 (units 4-6)
Normal Operating Pool Elevation 733 - 738 feet 633 - 638 feet 537 - 540 feet 437 - 440 feet
Maximum Pool Elevation 746.5 feet 646.5 feet 548.3 feet 446.0 feet
Power House Hydraulic Capacity 130,000 cfs 130,000 cfs 130,000 cfs 106,000 cfs
Power House Nameplate Capacity 6 @ 135 MW
810 MW total
6 @ 135 MW
810 MW total
6 @ 135 MW
810 MW total
3 @ 90 MW
3 @ 111 MW
603 MW total
Power House Overload Capacity 6 @ 155.3 MW
932 MW total
6 @ 155.3 MW
932 MW total
6 @ 155.3 MW
930 MW total
3 @ 103.5 MW
3 @ 127.5 MW
693 MW total
Spillway 512 feet
8 gates
512 feet
8 gates
572 feet
8 gates
590 feet
10 gates
Maximum Spillway Design Capacity 850,000 cfs
19.5 acre*feet/second
(?) (?) (?)
Reservoir Name Lower Granite Lake Lake Bryan Lake Herbert G West Lake Sacajawea
Reservoir Length 39.3 miles (Snake)
4.6 miles (Clearwater)
37.2 miles 28.7 miles 31.9 miles
Shoreline Length 91 miles 92 miles (?) (?)
Reservoir Width 0.3 miles (avg.)
0.6 miles (max)
0.4 miles (avg.)
0.8 miles (max)
0.4 miles (avg.)
0.8 miles (max)
0.4 miles (avg.)
1.0 miles (max)
Reservoir Surface Area 8900 acres 10,025 acres 6,590 acres 8,375 acres
Reservoir Storage 483,800 acre-feet (elev. 738)
440,200 acre-feet (elev. 733)
565,200 acre-feet (elev. 638)
516,300 acre-feet (elev. 633)
20,000 acre-feet
(between 537 & 540 feet elev.)
24,900 acre-feet
(between 437 & 440 feet elev.)
Abutment Embankment Gravel fill w/ rock facing, impervious silt core
Top width 45 feet, Slope 1V on 2H

Gravel fill w/ rock facing, impervious silt core
Top width 43 feet, Slope 1V on 2H

Length:
968 feet
(north shore)
1,075 feet
(south shore)
Length:
624 feet
(north shore)
Dam Length 3200 feet 2655 feet 3791 feet 2822 feet
Dam Height 100 feet 98 feet 100 feet 100 feet

Little Goose Dam (USACE Digital Visual Library)

Lower Monumental Dam (USACE Digital Visual Library)

Ice Harbor Dam (USACE Digital Visual Library)


Army Corps of Engineers, Walla Walla District
The Four Lower Snake River Dams
Data current in 2002

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