Martis Creek Dam and reservoir in winter Photographer Michael Nevins U.S. Army Corps of Engineers public domain image |
This dam is one of 10 dams in the U.S. that has been judged to have "urgent and compelling" safety concerns according to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The dam, which was completed in 1972, has significant leakage and was believed to lie close to two fault zones. If the dam fails, potentially parts of Reno could be flooded.
The dam is an earthen embankment, underlain by glacial outwash. It has a history of excessive seepage during reservoir test fillings, including sand boils through the downstream toe, and seepage along stratigraphic contacts adjacent to the spillway. These concerns, along with the two known faults, have prevented it from being used at its design level. (Note: a post here about sand boils, and an update on that post: the levee did fail and the town of Hamburg is now in danger of flooding.)
The plot has now thickened: this month, Hunter et al. reported in the Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America that Lidar work there revealed a new fault, now named the Polaris fault. It's 35 km long and has the potential to generate a magnitude 6.4-6.9 earthquake. It exhibits "youthful and laterally continuous tectonic geomorphic features" along its full length. It represents a significant seismic hazard to the greater Truckee-Lake Tahoe-Reno-Carson City area.
Reference: Hunter et al., LiDAR-Assisted Identification of an Active Fault near Truckee, California, Buletin of the Seismological Society of America, vol. 101 (3), p. 1162-1182, June 2011.
2 comments:
well i rarely leaves comment on any site but your blog is really so amazing that i can't stop myself from making comment on it...
This is really concerning. Great post.
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