Mississinewa Lake | |
Location: | Miami County, Indiana |
Coords: | 40.7167°N -85.9545°W |
Type: | reservoir |
Etymology: | Miami Language for "water on a slope". |
Rivers: | Mississinewa River |
Basin Countries: | United States |
Agency: | United States Army Corps of Engineers |
Area: | 3180acres |
Max-Depth: | 137feet[1] |
Volume: | 368400acre.ft |
Pushpin Map: | Indiana#USA |
Pushpin Map Alt: | Location of Mississinewa Lake Dam in Indiana, USA. |
Mississinewa Lake Dam is a dam in Miami County, Indiana, just outside the town of Peru, in the central part of the state.
The dam was among those authorized by the 1958 Flood Control Act. The dam was designed and built by the Louisville district of the United States Army Corps of Engineers.[2] The earthen dam was constructed from 1962[3] to 1967, with a height of, and long at its crest.[4] It impounds the Mississinewa River for irrigation storage and flood control. The dam is owned and operated by the Great Lakes and Ohio River Division of the Corps of Engineers.
The reservoir it creates, Mississinewa Lake, has a normal water surface of 5mi2, has a maximum capacity of 368400acre-feet, and a normal capacity of .[5] Mississinewa Lake operates in conjunction with the J. Edward Roush and Salamonie lakes to prevent flooding downstream in the lower Wabash and Ohio rivers.[2] Recreation includes fishing, boating, and swimming. Nearby recreation areas include the Miami State Recreation Area, the Red Bridge State Recreation Area, the Pearson Mill State Recreation Area, and the Frances Slocum State Recreation Area.