Theodore Roosevelt DamU.S. Bureau of Reclamation, 1992 - Dams |
From inside the book
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Page 5
... concrete extension that will completely encase the original masonry structure . Because the concrete extension will dramatically alter the appearance and his- torical integrity of the original design , the Bureau of Reclamation has ...
... concrete extension that will completely encase the original masonry structure . Because the concrete extension will dramatically alter the appearance and his- torical integrity of the original design , the Bureau of Reclamation has ...
Page 18
... concrete bridges over the spillways and the purchase of cultivated lands in the reservoir area , Davis estimated the overall construction cost of the dam at $ 1,908,387.43 HAER No. AZ - 6 page 19 By the time Theodore Roosevelt Dam.
... concrete bridges over the spillways and the purchase of cultivated lands in the reservoir area , Davis estimated the overall construction cost of the dam at $ 1,908,387.43 HAER No. AZ - 6 page 19 By the time Theodore Roosevelt Dam.
Page 36
... concrete . The use of concrete proved HAER No. AZ - 6 page 37 practical because cement Theodore Roosevelt Dam.
... concrete . The use of concrete proved HAER No. AZ - 6 page 37 practical because cement Theodore Roosevelt Dam.
Page 37
... concrete for the San Mateo Dam , other western dam builders typically turned either to earth fill design or to carefully fitted masonry construction using locally available stone . Two of the most famous western dams of the era were the ...
... concrete for the San Mateo Dam , other western dam builders typically turned either to earth fill design or to carefully fitted masonry construction using locally available stone . Two of the most famous western dams of the era were the ...
Page 42
... concrete ] so as to make a watertight construction . " To help facilitate this requirement he urged the use of " the largest proportion of stone and the smallest proportion of concrete ... that can be practically secured . " Finally ...
... concrete ] so as to make a watertight construction . " To help facilitate this requirement he urged the use of " the largest proportion of stone and the smallest proportion of concrete ... that can be practically secured . " Finally ...
Common terms and phrases
A.P. Davis American Apache Trail Association AZ-6 page BALT building built C.W. Smith cableways Canal Company canyon cement mill Charles Walcott cofferdam completed concrete contract contractor cost crew cubic yards dam construction dam design dam's damsite downstream E.A. Hitchcock early Engineering Record Entry F.H. Newell federal feet Figure floods flow Geological Survey Government Hill gravity dam HAER History to 1911 Hudson Reservoir hydraulic initial irrigation June L.C. Hill labor land Magnificent Experiment March Masonry Dams Mesa Mormon mortar O'Rourke operation penstock Phoenix power canal power plant quarry Reclamation Service engineers River Project Arizona River Valley Water road Roosevelt Dam Salt River Project Salt River Valley Service's sluicing tunnel Smith SPILLWAY SPILLWAY BRIDGE stone structure Tainter gates Third Annual Report Tonto Basin Tonto Dam turbines U.S. Reclamation Service upstream face Valley Water Users VIEW Washington water rights Water Storage Wegmann West Wisner Zarbin
Popular passages
Page 19 - reclamation fund," to be used in the examination and survey for and the construction and maintenance of irrigation works for the storage, diversion, and development of waters for the reclamation of arid and semiarid lands in the said States and Territories...
Page 19 - That all moneys received from the sale and disposal of public lands in Arizona, California, Colorado. Idaho, Kansas, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota...
Page 19 - It Is as right for the National Government to make the streams and rivers of the arid region useful by engineering works for water storage as to make useful the rivers and harbors of the humid region by engineering "works of another kind.
Page 19 - Great storage works are necessary to equalize the flow of streams and to save the flood waters. Their construction has been conclusively shown to be an undertaking too vast for private effort.
Page 52 - While there has been and still is a wide difference of opinion as to the effect of...
Page 7 - Smith, The Magnificent Experiment: Building the Salt River Reclamation Project, 18901917 (Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 1986).
Page 67 - Deduction for failare to complete. — Bidders will state in their proposals the time in which they propose to complete the dam to a height of 150 feet above the datum, which datum is about low-water mark. Time is an element in the construction of this work, and will be considered in the examination and comparison of bids and the award of the contract therefor.
Page 67 - ... After the completion of the dam to the 150-foot level, it shall be discretionary with the engineer whether masonry work on the dam be permitted during the months of June, July, August, and September, but work shall be prosecuted vigorously and continuously during the remaining eight months of the year, at a rate per month of not less than two-thirds of that achieved during the construction of the lower portion of the dam, considered in cubic yards of masonry laid. The contractor shall place in...
Page 105 - In 1Э17 the project was turned over to the Salt River Valley water users' Association for operation and maintenance.
Page 35 - The lines of pressure must lie within the centre third of the profile, whether the reservoir be full or empty. 2d. The maxima pressures in the masonry or on the foundation must not exceed certain safe limits. 3d. The friction between the dam and its foundation, or between any two parts into which the wall may be divided by a horizontal plane, must be sufficient to prevent sliding.