El Carrizal Dam
| El Carrizal Dam | |
|---|---|
|  Spillway and reservoir | |
|   Location of El Carrizal Dam in Argentina | |
| Country | Argentina | 
| Location | Mendoza | 
| Coordinates | 33°18′0″S 68°43′15″W / 33.30000°S 68.72083°W | 
| Purpose | Power, irrigation | 
| Status | Operational | 
| Construction began | 1965 | 
| Opening date | 1971 | 
| Dam and spillways | |
| Type of dam | Embankment, earth and rock-fill | 
| Impounds | Tunuyán River | 
| Height | 46 m (151 ft) | 
| Length | 2,113 m (6,932 ft) | 
| Width (crest) | 10 m (33 ft) | 
| Reservoir | |
| Total capacity | 462,000,000 m3 (375,000 acre⋅ft) | 
| Surface area | 34.8 km2 (13.4 sq mi) | 
| Turbines | 2 x 8.5 MW Francis-type | 
| Installed capacity | 17 MW | 
| Annual generation | 83 Mio. kWh | 
The El Carrizal Dam (in Spanish, Embalse El Carrizal) is a dam on the upper-middle course of the Tunuyán River, in the center-north of the province of Mendoza, Argentina upstream from the city of Rivadavia. Its reservoir measures about 15 by 5 kilometres (9.3 mi × 3.1 mi), and its maximum water level stands at 785.5 metres (2,577 ft) above the sea, covering an area of 34.8 square kilometres (13.4 sq mi). It has a maximum volume of 462 million cubic metres (16.3×109 cu ft).[1]
The dam is used to regulate the flow of the Tunuyán River, which comes from glacial sources in the Andes, and to irrigate the otherwise arid region. The reservoir is a tourist attraction and is employed for fishing, windsurfing, sailing, etc., while its shores feature camping sites and other lodging facilities.
The waters of the dam feed a hydroelectric power station, which was built in 1971 and has an installed power generation capacity of 17 megawatts (23,000 hp).[1]
Notes
- ^ a b "Inventario de Presas y Centrales Hidroeléctricas de la República Argentina 2" (PDF). Ministerio de Planificación Federal, Inversión Pública y Servicios. Retrieved 2019-05-12.
References
External links
 Media related to El Carrizal Dam at Wikimedia Commons Media related to El Carrizal Dam at Wikimedia Commons