Earthen dam

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The poorly-designed Teton Dam emptying. Not all earthen dams lead to such disasters
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The poorly-designed Teton Dam emptying. Not all earthen dams lead to such disasters

An Earthen dam, or earth-fill dam, is a dam constructed as a simple embankment of well-compacted earth, sometimes with a watertight concrete or clay core or upstream face, or sometimes with a hydraulic fill to produce a watertight core. A type of temporary earth dam occasionally used in high latitudes is the frozen-core dam, in which a coolant is circulated through pipes inside the dam to maintain a watertight region of permafrost within it.

Because earth dams can be constructed from materials found on-site or nearby, earth dams can be very cost-effective in regions where the cost of producing or bringing in concrete would be prohibitive.

A well-known (and catastrophic) earth dam was the Teton Dam, that collapsed in 1976.

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