Mojave Forks Dam | |
Location Map: | California |
Location Map Alt: | Location of Mojave Forks Dam in California |
Coordinates: | 34.3433°N -117.2342°W |
Country: | United States |
Location: | Hesperia, California |
Purpose: | Flood control |
Owner: | U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Los Angeles District |
Dam Type: | Rolled earthfill embankment |
Dam Crosses: | Mojave River |
Dam Height: | 193feet |
Dam Length: | 2223feet |
Res Name: | Mojave River Forks Reservoir |
Res Capacity Total: | 179400acre feet |
Res Catchment: | 215mi2 |
The Mojave Forks Dam, most often known as the Mojave River Dam, is an earth-fill dry dam across the Mojave River in San Bernardino County, California in the United States. Completed in 1974 by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE), the dam is located at the confluence of the West Fork Mojave River and Deep Creek, and can store approximately 179400acre feet of water.
The Mojave River forks were first identified as a potential dam site in 1875, and flooding in the 1930s confirmed the need for a flood control facility along the Mojave River.[1] However, it would be 30 more years before the state endorsed such a project. The West Fork Flood Control and Reservoir Project were authorized in 1960, and the USACE created a final design by 1966. Construction began in June 1967, and the embankment was topped out in May 1971. The project was formally completed and operational by 1974.
Federal engineers found in 2019 that the dam falls short of national safety standards and could erode and collapse in an extreme flood.[2]
The dam is 200feet high from the foundations, 193feet high above the riverbed, and 2223feet long.[3] The main embankment, a rolled earthfill design, contains 5310000yd3 of material.[4] A smaller auxiliary dam is located directly to the west of the main dam, while the concrete spillway is on the east side of the dam.
The reservoir controls runoff from a rugged drainage basin of 215mi2 on the north slope of the San Bernardino Mountains. Although the entire Mojave River basin covers 4700mi2, the comparatively small area behind the dam contributes the vast majority of the water in the river, the remaining 95 percent of the watershed being desert.[5] The towns of Victorville, Hesperia and others in the Victor Valley region along the Mojave River, as well as towns further downstream such as Barstow, are the primary beneficiaries of the project.[6] [7]
Because the dam serves strictly for flood control, the reservoir is usually low or non-existent; however, it can fill quickly following heavy winter storms.[8] Flood waters are released as quickly as possible without exceeding the capacity of downstream levees. Unlike most dams, the Mojave Dam outlet has no gates, meaning that the outflow is directly dependent on the water level behind the dam. All river flows below 7300cuft/s pass unimpeded through the dam's outlets. The dam is designed to contain a design flood of 94000cuft/s, to a maximum outflow of 23500cuft/s. The reservoir is generally drained within 2–3 days of a flooding event.[6]
Because the dam reduces the sharp peaks of flash floods in the Mojave River channel, it also provides incidental groundwater recharge benefits in the Victor Valley area.[6]
Although there is no permanent pool at Mojave Forks, the dam and the surrounding area are part of Mojave River Forks Regional Park, which provides camping and hiking facilities.[8] [9] The Pacific Crest Trail also runs parallel the eastern end of the dam as it travels between the valleys of Deep Creek and the West Fork Mojave River.[10]