Edersee Dam

The Edersee Dam is a hydroelectric dam spanning the Eder river in northern Hesse, Germany. Constructed between 1908 and 1914, it lies near the small town of Waldeck at the northern edge of the Kellerwald. Breached by Allied bombs during World War II, it was rebuilt during the war, and today generates hydroelectric power and regulates water levels for shipping on the Weser river.

Edersee Dam
Location of Edersee Dam in Germany
CountryGermany
LocationWaldeck-Frankenberg, Hesse
Coordinates51°11′00″N 09°03′32″E
Construction began1908
Opening date1914
Dam and spillways
Type of damGravity dam
ImpoundsEder
Height48 m (157 ft)
Length400 m (1,312 ft)
Width (crest)6 m (20 ft)
Width (base)36 m (118 ft)
Dam volume300,000 m3 (10,594,400 cu ft)
Spillway capacity1,774 m3/s (62,648.2 cu ft/s)
Reservoir
CreatesEdersee
Total capacity199,300,000 m3 (7.038213078×109 cu ft)
Catchment area1,443 km2 (557 sq mi)
Surface area11.8 km2 (4.6 sq mi)
Maximum water depth41.7 m (137 ft)
Power Station
Operator(s)16.9 m
TypeConventional
Hydraulic head45 m (148 ft)
Installed capacity21MW

At low water in late summers of dry years the remnants of three villages (Asel, Bringhausen, and Berich) and a bridge across the original river bed submerged when the lake was filled in 1914 can be seen. Descendants of those buried there go to visit the graves of their ancestors.

World War II

Photograph of the Eder Dam on 17 May 1943
The Edersee today (low water level)

The dam was breached in World War II by bouncing bombs dropped by British Lancaster bombers of No. 617 Squadron RAF as part of Operation Chastise. The early morning raid of 17 May 1943 created a massive 70 metres (230 ft) wide and 22 metres (72 ft) deep breach in the structure. Water emptied at the rate of 8,000 cubic metres per second (280,000 cu ft/s) into the narrow valley below, producing a 6–8 metres (20–26 ft) flood wave which roared as far as 30 kilometres (19 mi) downstream. By the time it diminished in the widening floodplains of the lower Eder, into the Fulda and into the Weser, a total of about 160 cubic meters per hectare had flowed, wreaking widespread destruction and claiming the lives of some 70 people.[1]

(Some non-German sources erroneously cite an early total of 749 for all foreigners killed in all POW and labour camps downriver of the Möhne dam as casualties at a supposed POW or labour camp just below the Eder Dam.[2])

The dam was rebuilt within months by forced labour drawn from construction of the Atlantic Wall under command of Organisation Todt. The lake today is the third largest reservoir in Germany. Its capacity of 199,300,000 cubic metres (260,700,000 cu yd) makes it a major summertime recreational facility.

The 1955 film, The Dam Busters chronicled the British attack on the dam.

gollark: It can even detect someone saying that potatOS is "not not bad".
gollark: I made an advanced NLP system to detect blasphemy on SwitchCraft.
gollark: It's probably as well designed as the potatOS blasphemy detector.
gollark: I'm sure they can be trusted to determine that with no possibility whatsoever of mistakes!
gollark: Are you familiar with the natural numbers?

See also

References

  1. Ralf Blank (May 2006). "Die Nacht vom 16. auf den 17. Mai 1943 – "Operation Züchtigung": Die Zerstörung der Möhne-Talsperre". Landschaftsverband Westfalen-Lippe. Retrieved 2008-01-29.
  2. "1943: RAF raid smashes German dams". BBC. 1943-05-17. Retrieved 2007-05-17.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.