Table Rock Lake

Table Rock Lake

Aerial photo of Table Rock Dam, in Branson, Missouri, which impounds the White River and forms the lake.
Location Missouri / Arkansas
Coordinates 36°34′00″N 93°18′0″W / 36.56667°N 93.30000°W / 36.56667; -93.30000Coordinates: 36°34′00″N 93°18′0″W / 36.56667°N 93.30000°W / 36.56667; -93.30000
Type reservoir
Primary inflows White River, James River, Kings River
Primary outflows White River
Basin countries United States
Surface area 43,100 acres (174 km2)
Max. depth 220 feet (67 m)
Water volume 3,462,000 acre·ft (4.270 km3)
Shore length1

Flood Pool- 857 miles (1,379 km)

Normal Pool- 745 miles (1,199 km)
Surface elevation 915 ft (279 m)
Settlements Branson, Missouri
1 Shore length is not a well-defined measure.

Table Rock Lake is an artificial lake or reservoir in The Ozarks of southwestern Missouri and northwestern Arkansas. The lake is impounded by Table Rock Dam (location 36°35′43″N 93°18′40″W / 36.595374°N 93.311137°W / 36.595374; -93.311137) constructed in 1954-1958 on the White River by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.[1]

It is one of the popular draws for the nearby town of Branson, Missouri. There are several commercial marinas along the lake, and Table Rock State Park is located on the east side, both north and south of Table Rock Dam. Downstream from the dam, the Missouri Department of Conservation operates a fish hatchery, which is used to stock trout in Lake Taneycomo. The cold water discharged from the dam creates a trout fishing environment in Lake Taneycomo.

Lake temperature

The lake area temperature varies according to season:[2]

Lake data

Dam and Outlet Measurements[3]

Dam elevations above mean sea level[3]

Lake elevations above mean sea level[3]

Surface area of lake[3]

Table Rock Dam during the April 2008 flood with all flood gates open

Maximum storage capacity[3]

Shoreline length[3]

Other[3]

Power generating data[3]

Flood control

The original purpose of the reservoir was for flood control on the White River. The dam had been authorized a month earlier under the Flood Control Act of September 3, 1943. The reservoir has a fluctuation of 16 feet (4.9 m). When the reservoir is above the maximum flood pool, excess water goes over the auxiliary overflow spillway at the north end of the dam.

The worst-case scenario of a catastrophic floodwater discharge from Table Rock Lake using the auxiliary floodgates would roughly resemble this:

At elevation 931 Table Rock Lake is at full flood capacity. The ten Tainter gates are opened to accommodate additional lake inflow from the White River Basin including the James River and Beaver Lake discharge.

At elevation 937 Table Rock Lake is 6 feet above flood capacity. The ten Tainter gates are opened wider in an effort to stabilize reservoir rise. Outflow from the Lake under these circumstances will be nearing 200-300 thousand cubic feet per second (CFS).

At elevation 942 Table Rock Lake is 11 feet above flood capacity and at its "design pool", or the maximum elevation that the reservoir is engineered to reach, under "probable maximum flood" scenarios. The dam’s ten Tainter gates will be fully raised to their maximum height of approximately 30 feet letting loose 550 thousand CFS into Lake Taneycomo. This scenario would effectively submerge and destroy the powerhouse, power transmission grid, hatchery, and wreak serious destruction down stream. An illustration of how Table Rock’s ten spillways might appear under these circumstances mimics this: the floodgates will extend up and out from the structure, like eyebrows, shadowing the concrete spillways!

At elevation 947 Table Rock Dam would be at its maximum capacity and water would be at the very top of the dam. The auxiliary spillway would be brought online, in concert with Table Rock’s fully opened floodgates. This catastrophic or "last resort" protocol releases 1 million CFS of lake waters into Taneycomo and deals dreadful destruction to Branson, Hollister, Point Lookout and possibly the Powersite Dam. At this point there is a danger of water overtopping the concrete dam and breaching the earthen structure, which imminently leads to cataclysmic structural failure and the uncontrolled release of the Table Rock Lake impoundment—nearly 3 million CFS of water.

Record crest 935.47 feet on 4/27/11

In December 2015, the dam released 72,000 CFS at its peak. This is the highest amount ever released.

SOURCE:[4]

Facilities and State Park

Table Rock State Park (Missouri) provides public access to the lake. Six miles from Branson and located just south of the dam and outlet, facilities include a boat launch and full service marina (including cafe, boat rental and scuba dive shop), campground (including full RV hookups and a yurt), fishing access, swimming access (no beach), picnic area, ampitheater, hiking and mountain bike trails, and dump station.[5]

Area71 is a recreational vehicle (RV) resort, restaurant, and general store on Table Rock Lake in Shell Knob, Missouri. The store and restaurant were completely rebuilt in 2016 with an expanded menu and bait shop. The RV park features views of Table Rock Lake with long term site rental agreements.

References

Further reading

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