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Table of Contents

Table of Contents


History of Dam's

  • Earlier Adventures of Dam Constructions

    • The oldest dam is called Jawa Dam and it found in the country Jordan

      • This dam was built in the 4th millennium BCE and it was responsible for holding back the water of a small stream

    • There is evidence that another dam was built near Cairo, Egypt around 2700 BCE, it was called the Sadd el-Kafara. This dam was a gravity dam, meaning that it used its weight to resist the water load
      • This wall was made of rubble masonry walls on the outsides and filled with 100,000 tons of gravel and stone
      • A limestone cover was placed on the outside to resist erosion and wave action
      • The dam failed a few years later due to overflow. The dam was not water tight and water flowed through it quickly which allowed the water to erode it away
    • The next dam known dam was built in 2000 BC called the Nimrod's Dam in Mesopotamia
      • It was an earth dam; they are like gravity dams except it is made from soil
      • The dam was watertight, with a core wall and filled with an impervious center usually made of clays.
    • Due the large size and the amount of building materials that were required to build a dam, the arch dam was created to reduce the materials used
      • The first ever known arch dam was in the 1280 AD in the Mongol period called the Kebar


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Sadd el-Kafara Dam
  • How the Dam's were Constructed between the 1850- 1900

    • In the second half of the 19th Century, there was a increase in population in California due to the gold rush
      • Since water was used for mining, the residence wanted to market on the water usage, and they built dams to help them
      • The dams were small, and their purpose was to direct the water to the mining areas. They were mainly constructed with earth and rocks
    • Soon after that, the technology improved, and it allowed for California to build a bigger concrete dam
      • The Lower Crystal Springs Dam provided a significant example of a concrete gravity dam that set a precedence for future dam design. It was built in the 1888 near the San Andreas Fault. This dam was able to withstand the 1906 San Francisco earthquake with little to no damage.
    • The constant Arch design also came about in the 19th Century once again to reduce the material that needed to be used. It was possible due to new engineering and technology advancement
      • It used its shape to withstand the water pressures unlike the gravity dam that resistance it by its weight
      • However, even though new advances were discovered, the stresses that occur on the arch dam were not fully understood, so most of the arch dam’s resembled gravity dams with broad cross sections


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Lower Crystal Springs Dam

Dam Failures


References

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