Elevation point file for Lake McConaughy, Nebraska
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with The Central Nebraska Public Power and
Irrigation District (CNPPD), conducted a study that used bathymetric and topographic
surveying in conjunction with Geographical Information Systems techniques to determine
the 2003 physical shape and storage capacity, as well as the change in storage capacity
of Lake McConaughy that occurred over 62 years. By combining the bathymetric and
topographic survey data, the 2003 surface area of Lake McConaughy was determined
to be 30,413.0 acres, with a volume of 1,756,300 acre-feet at the lake conservation-pool
elevation of 3,266.4 feet above North American Vertical Datum of 1988 (3,265.0 feet
above CNPPD datum). To determine the changes in storage of Lake McConaughy, the
2003 survey Digital Elevation Model (DEM) was compared to a preconstruction DEM
compiled from historical contour maps. This comparison showed an increase in elevation
at the dam site due to the installation of Kingsley Dam. Immediately to the west of the
Kingsley Dam is an area of decline where a borrow pit for Kingsley Dam was excavated.
The comparison of the preconstruction survey to the 2003 survey also was used to
estimate the gross storage capacity reduction that occurred between 1941 and 2002.
The results of this comparison indicate a gross storage capacity reduction of approximately
42,372 acre-feet, at the lake conservation-pool elevation of 3,266.4 feet in NAVD 88
(3,265.0 feet in CNPPD datum). By comparing preconstruction and 2003 survey data
and subtracting the Kingsley Dam and borrow pit, the total estimated net volume of
sediment deposited from 1941 to 2003 was 53,347,124 cubic yards, at an annual
average rate of 860,437 cubic yards per year. The approximate decrease in the net
storage capacity from 1941 to 2003 was 33,066 acre-feet, at an annual average decrease
of approximately 533 acre-feet per year, which resulted in a 1.8 percent decrease in
storage capacity of Lake McConaughy. The lake accumulated most of the sediment in
the original river channel and in the west end of the delta area on the upstream end of
the lake.
Complete Metadata
| bureauCode |
[ "010:12" ] |
|---|---|
| identifier | http://datainventory.doi.gov/id/dataset/USGS_e9bf31c3-cc86-4ff8-ad8b-f1d4162773d1 |
| spatial | -102.022595, 41.192180, -101.669107, 41.311195 |
| theme |
[ "Geospatial" ] |