French Meadows Reservoir

French Meadows Reservoir
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Location Placer County, California
Primary inflows North Fork American River
Basin countries United States
Max. length 2.9 mi (4.7 km)
Max. width 0.6 mi (0.97 km)
Water volume 125,601 acre·ft (154,927,000 m3)
Shore length1 7.3 mi (11.7 km)
Surface elevation 5,263 ft (1,604 m)
1 Shore length is not a well-defined measure.

French Meadows Reservoir is a manmade lake 36 miles (58 km) northeast of Foresthill, California United States. on the Middle Fork of the American River. The reservoir is 2.9 miles (4.7 km) long, 0.6-mile (0.97 km) wide, with 7.3 miles (11.7 km) of shoreline.

Tahoe National Forest manages the recreational facilities which include five campgrounds, two group campgrounds and two paved boat launch ramps. Activities at the lake include powerboating, kayaking, canoeing, fishing, picniking and hiking. The reservoir is entirely within a state game refuge so no firearms, pellet guns or archery weapons are allowed. The elevation of the lake is 5,263 feet (1,604 m) and is nine miles (14 km) from the crest of the Sierra Nevada Mountain Range.[1]

History

The reservoir was built in December 1964 with the construction on the Middle Fork of the American River of the L.L. Anderson dam. The dam is rock-fill with earth core. The capacity of the reservoir is 125,601 acre feet (154,927,000 m3) of water. French Meadows Reservoir is part of the Middle Fork Project for power generation and its water is diverted to the powerhouse on Hell Hole Reservoir by an underground tunnel. Releases from French Meadows Reservoir to the powerhouse began one year later, December 13, 1965. The project is operated by the Placer County Water Agency.[2]

Footnotes

  1. ^ Pike, Charles Paddling Northern California, The Globe Pequot Press, 2001
  2. ^ The 1999 California Hydrologic Data Report USGS retrieved 13 March 2008