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Wyangala Dam

Wyangala Dam

FieldValue
nameWyangala Dam
imageWyangaladamfullcapacity.jpg
image_captionWyangala Dam, near full capacity, 2012
location_mapNew South Wales
location_map_captionLocation of the Wyangala Dam in
New South Wales
coordinates
locationNew South Wales, Australia
statusO
construction_began1928
opening1935
costA£1.352 million
ownerState Water Corporation
dam_typeE
dam_height85 m
dam_length1370 m
dam_volume3580 m3
dam_crossesLachlan River
spillway_count9
spillway_typeRadial gates and concrete chute
spillway_capacity14700 m3/s
res_nameLake Wyangala
res_capacity_total1220000 ML
res_catchment8300 km2
res_surface5390 ha
res_elevation379 m AHD
res_max_depth79 m
plant_typeC
plant_capacity18 MW
plant_annual_gen42.9 GWh
website

New South Wales

Wyangala Dam is a major gated rock fill with clay core embankment and gravity dam with eight radial gates and a concrete chute spillway across the Lachlan River, located in the south-western slopes region of New South Wales, Australia. The dam's purpose includes flood mitigation, hydro-power, irrigation, water supply and conservation. The impounded reservoir is called Lake Wyangala.

Location and features

Wyangala Dam, New South Wales, 1938
Wyangala Dam construction, November 1966

Commenced in 1928, completed in 1935, and upgraded in 1971, Wyangala Dam is a major reservoir situated below the confluence of the Lachlan and Abercrombie rivers, located approximately 38 km upstream, east of Cowra. The dam was built by the New South Wales Water Conservation & Irrigation Commission to supply water for irrigation, flood mitigation and potable water for the towns of Cowra, Forbes, Parkes, Condobolin, Lake Cargelligo, Euabalong and Euabalong West. The dam also provides water for a far larger area and operates in conjunction with Lake Brewster and Lake Cargelligo, to supply water to the lower Lachlan valley customers.

The dam wall constructed with 3580 m3 of rockfill and a clay core is 85 m high and 1370 m long. The maximum water depth is 79 m and at 100% capacity the dam wall holds back 1220000 ML of water at 379 m AHD. The surface area of Lake Wyangala is 5390 ha and the catchment area is 8300 km2. The eight radial gates and concrete chute of the spillway are capable of discharging 14700 m3/s.

The Wyangala Dam is the second oldest dam built for irrigation in New South Wales and was one of the last dams in the state where a railway or tramway system for construction purposes was utilised. It is the only dam on the Lachlan River system, which feeds the Murrumbidgee River, and in turn feeds the Murray River.

Power generation

A hydro-electric power station generates up to 22.5 MW of electricity from the flow of the water leaving Wyangala Dam with an average output of 42.9 GWh per annum. and the new facility, managed by Hydro Power Pty Ltd, completed in 1992.

History

Wyangala Dam and Lake Wyangala, during a period of sustained drought in 2003

The name Wyangala is said to originate from an indigenous Wiradjuri word of unknown meaning and is the name of Wyangala Station, one of the properties flooded by Lake Wyangala waters when construction of the dam was completed in 1935. The Wyangala Station homestead site, which was originally settled by the Newham family, is under the water level and can only be seen when the dam is close to being dry. The small settlement of Wyangala, located downstream of the dam wall, was established to house workers during the dam construction.

The current earth and rock wall was constructed between 1961 and 1971 due to fears that the original dam wall was beginning to lift away from its base, and as a result, would not be able to withstand a major flood. The original dam wall can be seen when the water level is around 30 per cent of the reservoir's catchment capacity.

In 2008, water entitlements were down to just 10 per cent of normal availability. Some inflows to the reservoir later in the year allowed restrictions for high security licence holders to be relaxed. In late 2009, drought had reduced the water storage level to 4.5 per cent of the reservoir's capacity.

The 2022 south eastern Australia floods in late October and early November 2022 resulted in the dam releasing a record 230,000,000,000 L/day. The previous record release rate was 205,000,000,000 L/day set in 1990.

References

References

  1. (2009). "Wyangala Dam". State Water Corporation.
  2. (2010). "Register of Large Dams in Australia". The Australian National Committee on Large Dams Incorporated.
  3. "Wyangala Dam". State Water Corporation.
  4. (2012). "Wyangala upgrade". State Water Corporation.
  5. (11 March 2010). "Councils get Wyangala Dam report". ABC News.
  6. (1989). "The Construction Railways of Wyangala Dam". Australian Railway Historical Society.
  7. "Wyangala Dam". [[Murray-Darling Basin Commission]].
  8. (28 April 1947). "Wyangala Power Station Opened". [[National Library of Australia]].
  9. "Wyangala Dam".
  10. (4 November 2008). "Boost for Lachlan Valley water allocations". ABC News.
  11. Kelly, Joe. (15 December 2009). "Premier Kristina Keneally waives fees for water". The Australian.
  12. "Thousands stranded in homes as flash flooding batters Central West NSW, Wyangala Dam spills at record rate". [[Australian Broadcasting Corporation]].
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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