Buckhorn Reservoir Explained

Buckhorn Reservoir
Coords:35.6914°N -78.12°W
Inflow:Turkey Creek and Moccasin Creek
Outflow:Contentnea Creek
Basin Countries:United States
Area:2300acres
Elevation:146feet
Pushpin Map:North Carolina#USA
Pushpin Map Alt:Location of Lake Mattamuskeet in North Carolina, USA.

Buckhorn Reservoir is a reservoir in Wilson County, North Carolina, USA, created by the Buckhorn Dam. The reservoir is the primary water supply for the city of Wilson. The original Buckhorn Dam was built in 1974, 1000feet upstream from the current dam.[1] The reservoir at that time only had the ability to contain 800e6USgal of water. In 1999, a new dam was constructed downstream from the older dam creating a reservoir with a much larger capacity. The new Buckhorn Reservoir covers an area of 2300acres, and has a capacity of 7e9USgal when fully filled.

The dam is one-half mile long and was built with expansion in mind. The top of the dam was built to an elevation of 159feet above sea level, although the lake is only filled to the 148feet elevation. The dam is capable of holding another 6feet of water, but that would require changes to the spillway design. A drought in 2007 caused the reservoir to drop to the 60% capacity level, which has raised the issue of increasing the capacity of the lake.

The reservoir is fed by two streams, Turkey Creek and Moccasin Creek. Water to be treated is not drawn from the reservoir itself. The outflow travels down Contentnea Creek to the Wiggins Mill reservoir, where the water is treated at the Wiggins Mill Water Treatment Plant.

References

  1. News: Saving for a rainy day...or not. The Wilson Times. Rochelle Moore. January 12, 2008. https://web.archive.org/web/20080416124103/http://www.wilsontimes.com/News/Local/Story/Saving_for_a_rainy_day___or_not__ . April 16, 2008 .