Alum Creek Lake | |
Location: | Delaware County, Ohio |
Coords: | 40.1857°N -82.9666°W |
Type: | impound |
Inflow: | Alum Creek |
Outflow: | Alum Creek |
Area: | 5sqmi |
Basin Countries: | United States |
Max-Depth: | 68feet |
Volume: | 134815acre.ft |
Pushpin Map: | USA Ohio |
Pushpin Map Alt: | Location of lake in Ohio |
Alum Creek Lake is a man-made reservoir located in Delaware County, Ohio, United States. It was built in 1974, covers, and has a maximum capacity of 134815acre.ft.
Alum Creek Dam was constructed between 1970 and 1974 on Alum Creek, a tributary of Big Walnut Creek, which drains into the Scioto River. The dam is a rolled earth-fill embankment 10000feet in length with a maximum height of 93feet. The spillway is located high on the right abutment with the raceway dropping off in front of it to the stilling basin below. Control is provided by three 34feet by 25feet tainter gates supported by 8abbr=onNaNabbr=on wide concrete piers resting on concrete ogee sections. The ogee sections have a crest elevation of and are founded at elevation.
On April 24, 1975, during a periodic inspection of the completed dam, the US Army Corps of Engineers expressed concern about the safety of the spillway monoliths. The rock underlying the dam is Ohio Black Shale which is a largely hard, massive silt shale. It is highly fractured below the base of weathering. Within this shale are several light gray, silty to clayey shale seams up to 1feet thick. It may be possible that the spillway monolith and its underlying bedrock could slide forward on one of these seams, opening a gap between the monolith and the rolled earth dam leading to rapid and catastrophic erosion of the dam.
Twelve, diameter core holes were drilled in the raceway directly in front of the ogee weirs. At least six of these cores exhibited a clayey seam about elevation 830 (nine feet below the ogee foundations). Testing of this material and deep-seated sliding analysis indicated that the dam did indeed face a safety issue.
To prevent the concrete monolith from sliding forward, it was decided to install seven cable anchors deep into the bedrock. Each anchor consisted of bundled, high strength steel cables that were concreted into the bottom of the holes. They were then hydraulically tensioned and the holes filled with grout. Anchors were installed at a 45-degree angle to a depth of 813, or 26feet below the foundation of the ogees. On March 2, 1977, the project was bid to VSL Corporation for $254,777. Drilling for the anchors began on June 7, 1977. The final loading on each anchor was 1300 kips. On September 28, 1977, one of the anchor's foundations failed and had to be re-concreted. By 1978, the project was completed.
On January 16, 2005 Alum Creek Dam's reservoir reached its highest level since construction was completed in 1974, an elevation of 898.94, about 17feet above normal level. At this level control was maintained through the discharge pipe and it was not necessary to open the three main spillway gates.
This extreme event was caused by an average of of rain falling over Central Indiana and Ohio during January 4–14, 2005. This rain combined with snow melt and saturated ground to produce record breaking runoff. Other reservoirs also set pool level records, including Deer Creek, Delaware Lake, Paint Creek, Atwood Lake, Bolivar Dam, Charles Mill Lake, Dillon Lake, Dover Dam, Mohawk Dam and Wills Creek.
Alum Creek Lake is popular with locals and regional tourists alike with its fishing, picnicking, boating, disc golf course, kitesurfing and hiking opportunities.