CASITAS DAM RUPTURE POSSIBLE IN STRONG QUAKE, REPORT WARNS.Byline: Associated Press Associated Press: see news agency. Associated Press (AP) Cooperative news agency, the oldest and largest in the U.S. and long the largest in the world. A strong earthquake would likely turn the sandy soils at the base of Casitas Dam Casitas Dam is a dam on Coyote Creek that forms Lake Casitas near Ojai, California. The dam is located two miles above the junction of Coyote Creek and the Ventura River. Water from the Ventura River is diverted to Lake Casitas as well. into a jiggling mass that could rupture the structure and release a 300-foot wall of water into Coyote Creek, killing about 400 people. That worst-case scenario worst-case scenario n → Schlimmstfallszenario nt outlined in a final environmental report released Monday by the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation has inspired federal officials to press ahead with plans to shore up the dam that holds back Lake Casitas and avoid a flood disaster. ``If something did happen, there is a large potential for loss of life,'' said William Pennington, Casitas Dam project manager for the bureau. ``It would be an ugly situation.'' Under the scenario described in the report, a magnitude-7 quake on the nearby Red Mountain fault would rupture the dam and release the wall of water, killing people along the lower Ventura River and causing $430 million in property damage by the time the torrent reached the ocean. The dam is one of 40 that the bureau has identified as quake-prone in California, Oregon and Nevada. Beginning May 14, the agency plans to begin work to strengthen the 334-foot-tall dam, removing spongy spongy /spon·gy/ (spun´je) of a spongelike appearance or texture. spong·y adj. Resembling a sponge in appearance, elasticity, or porosity. soil and replacing it with firm earth. The job will cost $42 million and be completed by December 2000, Pennington said. Casitas Dam, built between 1956 and 1959, provides water to 40,000 users in Ventura County. The water it stores provides $30.6 million in annual benefits, one-third from recreational boaters and fishermen, and the rest from municipal, industrial and agricultural users. Short-term remedies in place to reduce the quake risk include dewatering Dewatering (dē′wöd·ər·iŋ) is the removal of water from solid material or soil by wet classification, centrifugation, filtration, or similar solid-liquid separation processes. wells to help dry out soils and a reduction in the volume of water kept in a spillway spillway, n a channel or passageway through which food escapes from the occlusal surfaces of the teeth during mastication. The occlusal, developmental, and supplemental grooves, as well as the incisal, occlusal, labial, buccal, and lingual embrasures, catch basin. |
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