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Monticello Dam

Monticello Dam is a 304-foot (93 m) high concrete arch dam in Napa County, California, United States, constructed between 1953 and 1957. The dam impounded Putah Creek to create Lake Berryessa in the Vaca Mountains.

Monticello Dam
LocationVaca Mountains,
Napa County, California.
Coordinates38°30′48″N 122°06′15″W / 38.5133°N 122.1042°W / 38.5133; -122.1042Coordinates: 38°30′48″N 122°06′15″W / 38.5133°N 122.1042°W / 38.5133; -122.1042
Construction began1953
Opening date1957
Operator(s)Bureau of Reclamation
Dam and spillways
ImpoundsPutah Creek
Height304 ft (93 m)
Length1,023 ft (312 m)
Width (base)100 ft (30 m)
Reservoir
CreatesLake Berryessa
Total capacity1,602,000 acre⋅ft (1.976×109 m3)
Catchment area566 sq mi (1,470 km2)[1]
Surface area20,700 acres (8,400 ha)
Power Station
Operator(s)Solano Irrigation District
Commission date1983
Turbines2 × 5 MW, 1 × 1.5 MW
Installed capacity11.5 MW
Annual generation56,806,000 KWh (2004)[2]
U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Monticello Dam
Just peeking over the top of the glory hole naturally for the first time in over a decade, February 16, 2017

Lake Berryessa is currently the seventh-largest man-made lake in California. Water from the reservoir primarily supplies agriculture in the Sacramento Valley downstream. The dam is noted for its classic, uncontrolled morning-glory-type spillway.[1] The diameter at the lip is 72 ft (22 m). Locally, the spillway is also known as the "Glory Hole".[3]

To the south is Putah Creek State Wildlife Area.

Statistics

 
The downstream face of the dam

Although the dam and its 26-mile (42 km) long reservoir are located entirely in eastern Napa County, the dam lies less than 500 ft (150 m) west of the boundary with Yolo County. In addition, parts of the lake's watershed extend into Lake County.

Monticello is a concrete medium thick arch dam 304 ft (93 m) high from the foundations, 1,023 ft (312 m) long and 239 ft (73 m) above the riverbed. The dam is 100 ft (30 m) thick at the base, tapering to 12 ft (3.7 m) at the crest. The total volume of construction materials is 326,000 cubic yards (249,000 m3).[4]

The capacity of the reservoir is 1,602,000 acre⋅ft (1.976×109 m3), with a full surface area of 20,700 acres (8,400 ha). The maximum operating elevation is 440 ft (130 m); any higher water levels will flow over the dam's spillway. About 375,000 acre-feet (0.463 km3) of runoff flow into the reservoir each year from its 566-square-mile (1,470 km2) watershed.[1]

The Monticello Dam Powerplant was completed in 1983 and has three generators, totaling a capacity of 11.5 megawatts (MW).[5] The powerplant is operated and maintained by the Solano Irrigation District. The electrical power is sent mostly to the North Bay area of the San Francisco Bay Area.

As of 1992, about 71,445 acres (28,913 ha), or nearly 75 percent, of the projected area was irrigable, and 593,878 acres (240,334 ha) were actually irrigated in Solano County.[6]

Water is diverted 6 miles (9.7 km) downstream of Monticello at the Putah Diversion Dam, and distributed to farms through the 33-mile (53 km) Putah South Canal. The canal ends at Terminal Reservoir, which supplies water to the cities of Vallejo and Benicia. A 1999 contract provides for the delivery of 207,350 acre-feet (0.25576 km3) of water each year for irrigation. About 32,000 acre-feet (0.039 km3) of municipal water are also supplied by the project.[7][8]

It was estimated that the dam and reservoir have prevented about $5,015,000 in flooding-related damages between 1957 and 1995.[7]

History

The dam was built as part of the Solano Project, which was intended to provide a full irrigation supply to 96,000 acres (39,000 ha) of prime agricultural bottomland in Solano County and Yolo County. The project lands have been farmed since the 1840s, but irrigation was difficult due to the lack of a reliable summer water supply. The Berryessa Valley, where the dam and reservoir are located, was formerly part of Rancho Las Putas, a 35,500-acre (14,400 ha) 1843 land grant to José and Sixto Berryessa, for whom the area is named. By the 1860s the rancho had been subdivided into many smaller parcels; before damming, the valley was one of California's most fertile agricultural regions, centering on the town of Monticello, with roughly 250 residents.[9][10]

 
The lower section of Lake Berryessa near Portuguese Canyon, seen looking upstream

The Solano Project first took shape in the 1940s after the formation of the Solano Irrigation District to manage the water resources of Putah Creek. On November 11, 1948, the Secretary of the Interior formally authorized the project, which would be constructed by the Bureau of Reclamation. The Bureau initially intended to incorporate the project as part of its larger Central Valley Project (CVP), which would manage the combined watersheds of the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers. However, locals strongly favored that Solano be financed and operated separately from the CVP.[9] A Senate hearing in 1953 confirmed that Solano would be constructed as an independent project.[11]

Land purchases in the future reservoir area were made in early 1953; however, landowners were allowed to stay throughout the construction period until their property was actually flooded by rising lake levels. The inhabitants of Berryessa Valley vehemently opposed the project, as did the city of Winters (one of the would-be beneficiaries of the project) because of close social ties to the town of Monticello.[11] Opponents of the big dam proposed that a series of smaller reservoirs be constructed to supply the water, but this was deemed uneconomical.[12] Most of Monticello's residents moved out by summer 1956, as rising waters approached the town. After the area was vacated, crews deforested the valley and demolished the existing buildings and infrastructure.[13] About 300 graves had to be relocated to higher ground.[9] Photographers Dorothea Lange and Pirkle Jones documented the town and its people before the town was flooded by the dam; the photographs were published in 1960.[13]

The primary construction contract was awarded to a consortium formed by Peter Kiewit Sons Co. and Parish Brothers, for construction of the main dam and relocation of California State Route 128, which ran through the Berryessa Valley. Excavation of the dam site and construction of a diversion tunnel continued through 1954, with the first concrete placed on August 9, 1955. Despite major flooding between January and May 1956, more than 90 percent of the concrete had been laid by December 1956, and the dam was topped out on November 7, 1957, at a total cost of about $37 million. This figure also includes the cost for associated downstream irrigation works and the highway relocation.[9]

The reservoir took five years to fill after construction, reaching capacity for the first time on April 18, 1963.[9] The reservoir completely inundated Monticello (though the city's ruins are visible at low water levels), and flooded 20,700 acres (8,400 ha) of the surrounding Berryessa Valley. At the time, Lake Berryessa was the second-largest volume reservoir in California, after Shasta.

The Bureau of Reclamation operates five recreational areas around the lake, providing boat ramps and day-use facilities.[14] Recreational use has been declining since 2008. This area has been burdened with the rough bureaucratic past due to what has been experienced since 2008 when Bureau of Reclamation tried to Install Pensus Inc. to run all of the existing resorts except pleasure cove and failed to do so successfully at the expense of those who live in the area. Eventually raising the white flag to Napa county in 2021 to try and solve the problem.

Local resorts did not have the option to renew contracts, as a part of BORs uncontrolled power over the region most operators were forced to leave against their will and were not properly compensated for improvements made to the resorts around the lake. Instead BOR demolished the resorts so they could claim they were from scratch sites. As many as 1.3 million visitors used to visit the lake each year, now that number is less than 400,000. The reduction in tourism has caused economic collapse of the surrounding area; as a result many residents have moved away, unable to keep up with the increase in utilities from the closure of the resorts.[15]

Spillway

 
Lake Berryessa overflowing into the Glory Hole spillway.
 
Spillway on October 10, 2009, when the water was 32.24 feet (9.83 m) below the crest.
 
The spillway at Monticello Dam in operation, February 19, 2017.

The dam's morning-glory-type spillway, known as the Glory Hole, is 72 feet (22 m) in diameter at lake level and narrows down to about 28 feet (8.5 m) at the exit. At the lake's peak level, the spillway can drain 48,400 cubic feet per second (1,370 m3/s), which occurs when the lake level rises to 15.5 feet (4.7 m) above the level of the funnel.

Water spills over its lip when the lake reaches 1,602,000 acre-feet (1.976×109 m3) and a reservoir elevation of 440 feet (130 m) above sea level. The last time the reservoir naturally spilled through the glory hole was on the afternoon of February 26, 2019.

Prior to that, the last time the spillway was active was February 16, 2017. After a number of storms had caused the lake level to rise 35.5 inches since January 1, 2017, the reservoir was on the cusp of spilling once again at 439.2 feet.[16] Eager to witness this event, a number of local boaters and recreation enthusiasts generated enough wake to cause the reservoir to spill, albeit briefly, at 1:45 p.m. on February 13, 2017. Lake Berryessa reservoir filled and ran into its glory hole spillway for the first time in over a decade on February 16, 2017, at approximately 3:00 p.m. PST .[17]

Current lake level status is available at Solano County Water Agency.

Swimming near the Glory Hole is prohibited.[18] The only known case of death from the spillway drain occurred in 1997. Emily Schwalek of Davis died after being caught in the current while swimming near the Glory Hole and being swept down the pipe, after holding on to the rim for about 20 minutes.[19]

Environmental impacts

The Lower Putah Creek Coordinating Committee (LPCCC) worked on a Watershed Management Action Plan which concluded the effects of Monticello Dam on the geomorphology of Putah Creek and other connected hydrology systems. A comparison of the creek before and after the project showed ground water was recharged less, sandbars were deteriorated, and bed level lowering in channel decreased the population dynamics of cottonwood and willow.[20] 

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c . Solano Project. U.S. Bureau of Reclamation. May 26, 2010. Archived from the original on April 29, 2014. Retrieved March 24, 2011.
  2. ^ "Monticello (7646)". Carbon Monitoring for Action. Retrieved April 22, 2014.
  3. ^ "Morning Glory Spillway". Davis Wiki. Retrieved April 23, 2014.
  4. ^ "Monticello Dam Dimensions". Solano Project. U.S. Bureau of Reclamation. May 26, 2010. Retrieved April 22, 2014.
  5. ^ "Berryessa Facts". U.S. Bureau of Reclamation. January 28, 2014. Retrieved April 22, 2014.
  6. ^ Redmond, Zachary (2000). "Solano Project". US Bureau of Reclamation. p. 22. Retrieved April 11, 2021. It was initially designed to irrigate approximately 96,000 acres of farmland. However, as of 1992, only 71,445 acres were irrigable under the Solano Project, and of that, only 59,378 were actually being irrigated.
  7. ^ a b . U.S. Bureau of Reclamation. May 27, 2011. Archived from the original on March 9, 2013. Retrieved April 22, 2014.
  8. ^ "Solano Project". US Bureau of Reclamation Projects & Facilities. Retrieved April 11, 2021.
  9. ^ a b c d e Redmond, Zachary (2000). (PDF). U.S. Bureau of Reclamation. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 24, 2012. Retrieved April 22, 2014.
  10. ^ Jensen, Peter (August 19, 2012). "Death of Monticello was a 'heartbreaker', Part II: Rancher Recalls Life Before Lake Berryessa". Napa Valley Register. Retrieved April 22, 2014.
  11. ^ a b Kim, Chloe (January 1, 2012). "Water works: Dam key to agricultural success". Davis Enterprise. Retrieved April 22, 2014.
  12. ^ "The Monticello Dam Controversy and Lake Berryessa" (PDF). Quail Ridge Reserve Human History. University of California Davis. July 5, 2005. Retrieved April 22, 2014.
  13. ^ a b Sherwin, Elizabeth (December 7, 1997). "Visit the lost town of Monticello in this photo essay". Davis Community Network. Retrieved April 22, 2014. It was in that year, 1956, that photographers Dorothea Lange and Pirkle Jones were hired by Life magazine to do a photo study of the last year of the Berryessa Valley. Life never ran the photo essay, but Aperture magazine published their "Death of a Valley" in 1960.
  14. ^ "Lake Berryessa Map and Visitor Services" (PDF). U.S. Bureau of Reclamation. May 23, 2013. Retrieved April 22, 2014.
  15. ^ Fimrite, Peter (March 26, 2012). "Lake Berryessa residents face hefty utility fix". SFGate. Retrieved April 22, 2014.
  16. ^ Unknown. "Lake Berryessa News". Retrieved February 14, 2017.
  17. ^ JL Sousa. "Bureau of Reclamation expects Lake Berryessa to reach capacity". Retrieved February 14, 2017.
  18. ^ Antonio Martinez Ron. "The Largest Drain Hole in the World". Retrieved June 29, 2013.
  19. ^ "Woman Sucked Into Lake Berryessa Spillway". SFGate. March 12, 1997. Retrieved June 29, 2013.
  20. ^ Lower Putah Creek Coordinating Committee (2005). "Lower Putah Creek Watershed Management Action Plan" (PDF). Winters, California: City of Winters. Retrieved August 14, 2020.

Sources

External links

monticello, foot, high, concrete, arch, napa, county, california, united, states, constructed, between, 1953, 1957, impounded, putah, creek, create, lake, berryessa, vaca, mountains, locationvaca, mountains, napa, county, california, coordinates38, 5133, 1042,. Monticello Dam is a 304 foot 93 m high concrete arch dam in Napa County California United States constructed between 1953 and 1957 The dam impounded Putah Creek to create Lake Berryessa in the Vaca Mountains Monticello DamLocationVaca Mountains Napa County California Coordinates38 30 48 N 122 06 15 W 38 5133 N 122 1042 W 38 5133 122 1042 Coordinates 38 30 48 N 122 06 15 W 38 5133 N 122 1042 W 38 5133 122 1042Construction began1953Opening date1957Operator s Bureau of ReclamationDam and spillwaysImpoundsPutah CreekHeight304 ft 93 m Length1 023 ft 312 m Width base 100 ft 30 m ReservoirCreatesLake BerryessaTotal capacity1 602 000 acre ft 1 976 109 m3 Catchment area566 sq mi 1 470 km2 1 Surface area20 700 acres 8 400 ha Power StationOperator s Solano Irrigation DistrictCommission date1983Turbines2 5 MW 1 1 5 MWInstalled capacity11 5 MWAnnual generation56 806 000 KWh 2004 2 U S Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System Monticello DamJust peeking over the top of the glory hole naturally for the first time in over a decade February 16 2017 Lake Berryessa is currently the seventh largest man made lake in California Water from the reservoir primarily supplies agriculture in the Sacramento Valley downstream The dam is noted for its classic uncontrolled morning glory type spillway 1 The diameter at the lip is 72 ft 22 m Locally the spillway is also known as the Glory Hole 3 To the south is Putah Creek State Wildlife Area Contents 1 Statistics 2 History 3 Spillway 4 Environmental impacts 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Sources 7 External linksStatistics Edit The downstream face of the dam Although the dam and its 26 mile 42 km long reservoir are located entirely in eastern Napa County the dam lies less than 500 ft 150 m west of the boundary with Yolo County In addition parts of the lake s watershed extend into Lake County Monticello is a concrete medium thick arch dam 304 ft 93 m high from the foundations 1 023 ft 312 m long and 239 ft 73 m above the riverbed The dam is 100 ft 30 m thick at the base tapering to 12 ft 3 7 m at the crest The total volume of construction materials is 326 000 cubic yards 249 000 m3 4 The capacity of the reservoir is 1 602 000 acre ft 1 976 109 m3 with a full surface area of 20 700 acres 8 400 ha The maximum operating elevation is 440 ft 130 m any higher water levels will flow over the dam s spillway About 375 000 acre feet 0 463 km3 of runoff flow into the reservoir each year from its 566 square mile 1 470 km2 watershed 1 The Monticello Dam Powerplant was completed in 1983 and has three generators totaling a capacity of 11 5 megawatts MW 5 The powerplant is operated and maintained by the Solano Irrigation District The electrical power is sent mostly to the North Bay area of the San Francisco Bay Area As of 1992 about 71 445 acres 28 913 ha or nearly 75 percent of the projected area was irrigable and 593 878 acres 240 334 ha were actually irrigated in Solano County 6 Water is diverted 6 miles 9 7 km downstream of Monticello at the Putah Diversion Dam and distributed to farms through the 33 mile 53 km Putah South Canal The canal ends at Terminal Reservoir which supplies water to the cities of Vallejo and Benicia A 1999 contract provides for the delivery of 207 350 acre feet 0 25576 km3 of water each year for irrigation About 32 000 acre feet 0 039 km3 of municipal water are also supplied by the project 7 8 It was estimated that the dam and reservoir have prevented about 5 015 000 in flooding related damages between 1957 and 1995 7 History EditThe dam was built as part of the Solano Project which was intended to provide a full irrigation supply to 96 000 acres 39 000 ha of prime agricultural bottomland in Solano County and Yolo County The project lands have been farmed since the 1840s but irrigation was difficult due to the lack of a reliable summer water supply The Berryessa Valley where the dam and reservoir are located was formerly part of Rancho Las Putas a 35 500 acre 14 400 ha 1843 land grant to Jose and Sixto Berryessa for whom the area is named By the 1860s the rancho had been subdivided into many smaller parcels before damming the valley was one of California s most fertile agricultural regions centering on the town of Monticello with roughly 250 residents 9 10 The lower section of Lake Berryessa near Portuguese Canyon seen looking upstream The Solano Project first took shape in the 1940s after the formation of the Solano Irrigation District to manage the water resources of Putah Creek On November 11 1948 the Secretary of the Interior formally authorized the project which would be constructed by the Bureau of Reclamation The Bureau initially intended to incorporate the project as part of its larger Central Valley Project CVP which would manage the combined watersheds of the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers However locals strongly favored that Solano be financed and operated separately from the CVP 9 A Senate hearing in 1953 confirmed that Solano would be constructed as an independent project 11 Land purchases in the future reservoir area were made in early 1953 however landowners were allowed to stay throughout the construction period until their property was actually flooded by rising lake levels The inhabitants of Berryessa Valley vehemently opposed the project as did the city of Winters one of the would be beneficiaries of the project because of close social ties to the town of Monticello 11 Opponents of the big dam proposed that a series of smaller reservoirs be constructed to supply the water but this was deemed uneconomical 12 Most of Monticello s residents moved out by summer 1956 as rising waters approached the town After the area was vacated crews deforested the valley and demolished the existing buildings and infrastructure 13 About 300 graves had to be relocated to higher ground 9 Photographers Dorothea Lange and Pirkle Jones documented the town and its people before the town was flooded by the dam the photographs were published in 1960 13 The primary construction contract was awarded to a consortium formed by Peter Kiewit Sons Co and Parish Brothers for construction of the main dam and relocation of California State Route 128 which ran through the Berryessa Valley Excavation of the dam site and construction of a diversion tunnel continued through 1954 with the first concrete placed on August 9 1955 Despite major flooding between January and May 1956 more than 90 percent of the concrete had been laid by December 1956 and the dam was topped out on November 7 1957 at a total cost of about 37 million This figure also includes the cost for associated downstream irrigation works and the highway relocation 9 The reservoir took five years to fill after construction reaching capacity for the first time on April 18 1963 9 The reservoir completely inundated Monticello though the city s ruins are visible at low water levels and flooded 20 700 acres 8 400 ha of the surrounding Berryessa Valley At the time Lake Berryessa was the second largest volume reservoir in California after Shasta The Bureau of Reclamation operates five recreational areas around the lake providing boat ramps and day use facilities 14 Recreational use has been declining since 2008 This area has been burdened with the rough bureaucratic past due to what has been experienced since 2008 when Bureau of Reclamation tried to Install Pensus Inc to run all of the existing resorts except pleasure cove and failed to do so successfully at the expense of those who live in the area Eventually raising the white flag to Napa county in 2021 to try and solve the problem Local resorts did not have the option to renew contracts as a part of BORs uncontrolled power over the region most operators were forced to leave against their will and were not properly compensated for improvements made to the resorts around the lake Instead BOR demolished the resorts so they could claim they were from scratch sites As many as 1 3 million visitors used to visit the lake each year now that number is less than 400 000 The reduction in tourism has caused economic collapse of the surrounding area as a result many residents have moved away unable to keep up with the increase in utilities from the closure of the resorts 15 Spillway Edit Lake Berryessa overflowing into the Glory Hole spillway Spillway on October 10 2009 when the water was 32 24 feet 9 83 m below the crest The spillway at Monticello Dam in operation February 19 2017 The dam s morning glory type spillway known as the Glory Hole is 72 feet 22 m in diameter at lake level and narrows down to about 28 feet 8 5 m at the exit At the lake s peak level the spillway can drain 48 400 cubic feet per second 1 370 m3 s which occurs when the lake level rises to 15 5 feet 4 7 m above the level of the funnel Water spills over its lip when the lake reaches 1 602 000 acre feet 1 976 109 m3 and a reservoir elevation of 440 feet 130 m above sea level The last time the reservoir naturally spilled through the glory hole was on the afternoon of February 26 2019 Prior to that the last time the spillway was active was February 16 2017 After a number of storms had caused the lake level to rise 35 5 inches since January 1 2017 the reservoir was on the cusp of spilling once again at 439 2 feet 16 Eager to witness this event a number of local boaters and recreation enthusiasts generated enough wake to cause the reservoir to spill albeit briefly at 1 45 p m on February 13 2017 Lake Berryessa reservoir filled and ran into its glory hole spillway for the first time in over a decade on February 16 2017 at approximately 3 00 p m PST 17 Current lake level status is available at Solano County Water Agency Swimming near the Glory Hole is prohibited 18 The only known case of death from the spillway drain occurred in 1997 Emily Schwalek of Davis died after being caught in the current while swimming near the Glory Hole and being swept down the pipe after holding on to the rim for about 20 minutes 19 Environmental impacts EditThe Lower Putah Creek Coordinating Committee LPCCC worked on a Watershed Management Action Plan which concluded the effects of Monticello Dam on the geomorphology of Putah Creek and other connected hydrology systems A comparison of the creek before and after the project showed ground water was recharged less sandbars were deteriorated and bed level lowering in channel decreased the population dynamics of cottonwood and willow 20 See also EditList of dams and reservoirs in California List of the tallest dams in the United StatesReferences Edit a b c Monticello Dam Hydraulics amp Hydrology Solano Project U S Bureau of Reclamation May 26 2010 Archived from the original on April 29 2014 Retrieved March 24 2011 Monticello 7646 Carbon Monitoring for Action Retrieved April 22 2014 Morning Glory Spillway Davis Wiki Retrieved April 23 2014 Monticello Dam Dimensions Solano Project U S Bureau of Reclamation May 26 2010 Retrieved April 22 2014 Berryessa Facts U S Bureau of Reclamation January 28 2014 Retrieved April 22 2014 Redmond Zachary 2000 Solano Project US Bureau of Reclamation p 22 Retrieved April 11 2021 It was initially designed to irrigate approximately 96 000 acres of farmland However as of 1992 only 71 445 acres were irrigable under the Solano Project and of that only 59 378 were actually being irrigated a b Solano Project U S Bureau of Reclamation May 27 2011 Archived from the original on March 9 2013 Retrieved April 22 2014 Solano Project US Bureau of Reclamation Projects amp Facilities Retrieved April 11 2021 a b c d e Redmond Zachary 2000 Solano Project PDF U S Bureau of Reclamation Archived from the original PDF on February 24 2012 Retrieved April 22 2014 Jensen Peter August 19 2012 Death of Monticello was a heartbreaker Part II Rancher Recalls Life Before Lake Berryessa Napa Valley Register Retrieved April 22 2014 a b Kim Chloe January 1 2012 Water works Dam key to agricultural success Davis Enterprise Retrieved April 22 2014 The Monticello Dam Controversy and Lake Berryessa PDF Quail Ridge Reserve Human History University of California Davis July 5 2005 Retrieved April 22 2014 a b Sherwin Elizabeth December 7 1997 Visit the lost town of Monticello in this photo essay Davis Community Network Retrieved April 22 2014 It was in that year 1956 that photographers Dorothea Lange and Pirkle Jones were hired by Life magazine to do a photo study of the last year of the Berryessa Valley Life never ran the photo essay but Aperture magazine published their Death of a Valley in 1960 Lake Berryessa Map and Visitor Services PDF U S Bureau of Reclamation May 23 2013 Retrieved April 22 2014 Fimrite Peter March 26 2012 Lake Berryessa residents face hefty utility fix SFGate Retrieved April 22 2014 Unknown Lake Berryessa News Retrieved February 14 2017 JL Sousa Bureau of Reclamation expects Lake Berryessa to reach capacity Retrieved February 14 2017 Antonio Martinez Ron The Largest Drain Hole in the World Retrieved June 29 2013 Woman Sucked Into Lake Berryessa Spillway SFGate March 12 1997 Retrieved June 29 2013 Lower Putah Creek Coordinating Committee 2005 Lower Putah Creek Watershed Management Action Plan PDF Winters California City of Winters Retrieved August 14 2020 Sources Edit Solano Project U S Bureau of Reclamation Monticello Dam U S Bureau of Reclamation External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Monticello Dam Portals California Water Renewable energy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Monticello Dam amp oldid 1090263712, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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