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Ross Dam is a 540-foot (160 m)-high, 1,300-foot (400 m)-long concrete thin arch dam across the Skagit River, forming Ross Lake. The dam is in Washington state , while Ross Lake extends 23 miles (37 km) north to British Columbia , Canada .
Ross Lake, formed by Ross Dam extends into British Columbia, which is 20 miles upriver from the dam. Ross Lake National Recreation Area surrounds the lake. Construction of Gorge Dam began in 1921 and the first power was delivered to Seattle in 1924. The cost of the dam was $13 million ($153,339,181 in 2006 dollars). [6]
Ross Lake is a large reservoir in the North Cascade mountains of northern Washington state, United States, and southwestern British Columbia, Canada.The lake runs approximately north–south, is 23 miles (37 km) long, up to 1.5 miles (2.5 km) wide, and the full reservoir elevation is 1,604 feet above sea level (489 m).
Ross Lake NRA follows the Skagit River corridor from the Canada–US border to the western foothills of the Cascades. The NRA contains a portion of scenic Washington State Route 20, the North Cascades Highway , and includes three reservoirs : 12,000-acre (4,900 ha) Ross Lake , 910-acre (370 ha) Diablo Lake , and 210-acre (85 ha) Gorge Lake.
Dam County River Reservoir Type Installed capacity (MW) Height Reservoir capacity Year Owner Primary purpose(s) ft m acre.ft dam 3; Alder Dam: Pierce/ Thurston: Nisqually River: Alder Lake: Arch 50.0: 330 100 241,950 298,440 1945 Tacoma Power: Hydroelectric Bonneville Dam† Skamania: Columbia River: Lake Bonneville: Gravity 1,242.0: 197 60 ...
The Pearl River Valley Water Supply District increased the discharge from Barnett Reservoir Thursday morning in anticipation of incoming water.
Ross Lake (Maine) Ross Lake (Crow Wing County, Minnesota) Ross Lake Township, Crow Wing County, Minnesota; Ross Lake (Ohio), a reservoir in Ross County; Ross Lake (Washington), a reservoir in Washington state and British Columbia; Ross Lake (Wood County, Wisconsin)
Ross Dam in the Ross Lake National Recreation Area. Mineral prospectors entered the North Cascades region, and by the 1850s were doing placer mining along the banks of the Skagit River in search of gold. In the 1870s, placer mining also commenced along Ruby Creek, and hundreds of miners came to the region even though it was difficult to access.