Anacoco Lake

Anacoco Lake, also known as Anacoco Reservoir, is a man-made lake in Vernon Parish, Louisiana, 10 miles west of Leesville, Louisiana. The lake was created in 1951, the result of impounding Anacoco Creek, Caney Creek, Prairie Creek, and Sandy Creek, for the purpose of water supply and recreation.

Anacoco Lake
Anacoco Lake
LocationVernon Parish, Louisiana, US
Coordinates31.11°N 93.37°W / 31.11; -93.37
TypeReservoir
Basin countriesUnited States
Surface area1,100 ha (2,600 acres)
Average depth2.8 m (9.2 ft)
Max. depth11 m (35 ft)
Shore length134 km (21 mi)
Surface elevation206.0 feet (62.8 m)
IslandsRabbit Island
SettlementsLeesville
1 Shore length is not a well-defined measure.

History

The Louisiana Legislature passed La. Act 277 of 1948 creating the Anacoco-Prairie State Game and Fish Preserve, setting aside 5,379 acres of land, money for the purchase of wild game and fish, and for restocking purposes, as well as for the building and maintenance of a dam. A second dam was authorized but no money provided. Construction was completed in 1951.[1]

Ownership and maintenance

The State of Louisiana owns the land under the lake and the Louisiana Department of Wildlife & Fisheries (LDWF) manages the fish and wildlife resources. The Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development has authority and maintenance over the levees, dam, and associated structures.

Lake Authority

Act 858 of the 1981 Legislature abolished the Anacoco Prairie Game and Fish Commission and transferred authority to the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries. The law provided for a panel of citizens to be appointed to an advisory board. The Vernon Parish Police Jury established the Vernon Parish Game and Fish Commission composed of nine members that includes two members of the jury.[2]

Construction

Anacoco Lake is impounded by an earthen dam with stone riprap approximately 4,670 feet in length. The dam has a 12-foot crown and the lake is 206.0 feet above mean sea level (MSL). The maximum height of the embankment is 37 feet. The dam has a six foot by six foot sluice gate that the LDWF has listed in bad shape.[3]

The original dam failed on January 21, 1956, and two hurricanes in 1957 hindered replacement until 1958[4]

gollark: They even have the same entries which is cool. For now.
gollark: (inevitably)
gollark: #4.
gollark: Well, whoever wins this round can pick.
gollark: Unless you just use the osmarkslisp™ parser.

References

  1. All Things Sabine- Retrieved 2017-11-15
  2. WLF: Anacoco Lake (pp. 6)- Retrieved 2017-11-15
  3. LA. Law Review: Anacoco Lake (pp 65-66)- Retrieved 2017-11-15
  4. Geological Survey Water-supply Paper, Issues 1441-1442 (pp. 42)- Retrieved 2017-11-17
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.