 
The Historical Saga of Glen Canyon Dam and Wahweap Bay
Any visit to Glen  Canyon Dam and Lake  Powell
 is a memorable event. The surreal nature of a giant concrete plug  
embedded in soft Arizona sandstone, while holding back the second 
largest  reservoir in America is a site to behold. Visitors can walk 
across the bridge  that spans the 800-foot chasm just downstream of the 
dam. As large trucks rumble  across the bridge at well over the 
twenty-five mile per hour speed limit, the  whole structure resonates at
 a low pitch. Many of the smaller vehicles  flagrantly violate the speed
 limit. There are no automated “Slow Down” signs and  little actual 
enforcement of the speed limit.
 
On a recent visit, I trained my camera lens between the chain links that
 make up  the safety fencing along the bridge. Looking down at the dam, 
which registers  710-foot tall, I noticed a strange anomaly. Where the 
canyon wall abuts the  lower-right portion of the dam, steel rods and 
plates had been installed to keep  the sandstone from crumbling. To make
 the scene even more startling, water had  seeped from behind the dam 
and along a horizontal seam. The
 result was a large,  horizontal mosey patch leading downstream from the
 dam itself. Apparently, the  dam was weeping around its eastern edge, 
and engineers had installed protective  bolts and plates. Their intent 
was to keep the lower canyon wall from crumbling  away and exposing more
 of the concrete dam.
 
If you have ever observed a concrete patch on an asphalt road or an 
asphalt  patch on a concrete road, you know that the hard concrete and 
the softer asphalt  to not make for a happy marriage. Concrete and 
asphalt expand and contract  deferentially under pressure, heat or 
moisture. The result is that sooner or  later the two will separate and 
create a greater problem than before the patch  was made. Likewise, the 
4,901,000 cubic yards of ever-hardening concrete within Glen Canyon Dam are  embedded in the soft and porous sandstone of Glen Canyon itself.
 
 When
 fully stressed by an overfilled condition in 1983, Lake Powell 
contained  over 27-million acre-feet of water. To avoid spilling water 
over the front of  the dam and possibly losing it all together, water 
managers were forced to run  both spillway tunnels at their designed 
maximum of 208,000 cubic feet per  second. Anonymous sources later 
revealed that as the extended water release  activity continued, the 
entire dam resonated and thrummed. Since parts of the  twin spillway 
tunnels were bored through sandstone, huge chunks of that  natural 
formation broke loose and swept out into the Colorado River.
When
 fully stressed by an overfilled condition in 1983, Lake Powell 
contained  over 27-million acre-feet of water. To avoid spilling water 
over the front of  the dam and possibly losing it all together, water 
managers were forced to run  both spillway tunnels at their designed 
maximum of 208,000 cubic feet per  second. Anonymous sources later 
revealed that as the extended water release  activity continued, the 
entire dam resonated and thrummed. Since parts of the  twin spillway 
tunnels were bored through sandstone, huge chunks of that  natural 
formation broke loose and swept out into the Colorado River.
 
How much lasting damage was done during the 1983 water release event 
will never  be known. Large public agencies like the United States 
Bureau of Reclamation (USBR),
  which runs Glen Canyon Dam, have a habit of hiding as much 
controversial  information as they can. What they cannot hide is the  thermal
 stress on the dam.  In January the average high temperature at nearby 
Page, Arizona is 44F degrees.  In July, the average high temperature is 
97F degrees, or 57F degrees higher.
thermal
 stress on the dam.  In January the average high temperature at nearby 
Page, Arizona is 44F degrees.  In July, the average high temperature is 
97F degrees, or 57F degrees higher.
 
Daily temperature cycles should also be considered. Each day throughout 
the  year, the high and low air temperatures vary by up to 24F degrees. 
Although the  concrete in the dam does not thermally cycle as 
dramatically, the face of the  dam is shaped like a parabola thus 
concentrating the sun on its southeastern  exposure. With cold water 
behind the dam and hot sun shining on the front of it,  how does the dam
 dissipate that energy into the sedimentary rock in which it  stands? 
Maybe that differential stress is why the unmentioned grout, steel bolts
  and plates have been installed in the sandstone canyon wall along the lower  right face of the dam.
 
After traveling over the Glen Canyon Dam Bridge, I proceeded west on 
Highway 89  to the Wahweap Overlook turnoff. The directional signage 
from Highway 89 West is  minimal, so the obscure turnoff is easy to 
miss. The paved road up the hill to  the overlook is adequate, but the 
unpaved parking area at the top has no traffic  markings or designated 
parking spots. Since the inception of the dam, the  Wahweap Overlook
 has defined how an “overlooked” overlook might look. Given the  
popularity of the site and its status as a senior citizen, authorities 
should  have paved the parking area and installed a restroom facility 
sixty years ago.  Perhaps it is a moot point, since the drying of Lake 
Powell could soon leave  Wahweap Overlook as just another dry knoll in 
the Arizona desert.
 
In
 May 2021, from Wahweap Overlook I could still see Wahweap Marina on the
 near  shore of Wahweap Bay. In the middle distance lay Castle Rock, 
which looks as  much like a castle as any other “Castle Rock” in the 
Western U.S. Farther north  and east stands the eroded volcanic shape of
 Navajo Mountain (elevation  10,387’). With some effort and a short hike
 down the hill, I could look  downstream and see the top portion of Glen
 Canyon Dam. Ironically, the water  level was about the same as I 
remembered it from my first visit to Lake Powell  in 1965. Keep in mind 
that Lake Powell was then still receiving its initial fill  of once 
abundant Colorado River water.
 
Even with its steadily shrinking size, Wahweap Bay still looks grand, 
giving  Lake Powell a spacious, breathtaking feel. Most visitors do not 
realize that  prior to the construction of the dam, the flow of the 
Colorado River never  touched what
 we now call Wahweap Bay. The main canyon, known as Glen Canyon,  
meanders northeast from the dam in a rocky trench. The containment 
created  by that sheer cliff does not broaden out again for many miles. 
From the Wahweap Overlook, I could see neither Glen Canyon or the Castle
 Rock  Cut, which once was Lake Powell’s much shorter version of the 
Suez Canal. As  such, it was a manmade cut in the sandstone, which 
allowed boats to pass from  Wahweap Bay upstream to Warm Creek Bay. 
Transiting that trench by boat bypassed  a stretch of Glen Canyon, 
shortening the distance from Wahweap to the upper  reaches of Lake 
Powell by twelve miles, or over one hour of travel time.
 
First
 cut into the sandstone in the 1970s, and with its bottom deepened to  
3,600’ elevation in 2014, the Castle Rock Cut served boaters for 
decades. As of  2021, Google Maps
 still shows the cut as if it is operational. I suppose the map  keepers
 at Google Maps are either too lazy to show current reality or perhaps  
they believe that the lake will refill itself and reactivate the cut for
 boat  travel. An environmental assessment in 2008 had optimistically 
stated that the  cut could be deepened to 3,580’ elevation. On July 23, 
2021, the reservoir’s  level fell to 3,555’ elevation, or twenty-five 
vertical feet below the final  proposed depth of the Castle Rock Cut. In
 other words, the Castle Rock Cut now  stands high and dry.
 
The iconic scene of Charlton Heston finding a destroyed Statue of 
Liberty in the  1968 original Planet of the Apes movie was filmed on the
 beach at Paradise  Cove,
  California. However, the opening scene, which depicts his prior crash 
landing in  a spacecraft was filmed at Lake Powell. With such Science 
fiction credibility  already established at Lake Powell, I suggest that 
the “Sandcrawler”,
 a  fictional transport vehicle in the Star Wars universe that is found 
on the  desert planet Tatooine be redeployed to the Castle Rock Cut. 
There it could be utilized as a houseboat transporter. It could scoop up
 a boat from Wahweap Bay,  and then use its many treads to crawl the 
Castle Rock Cut to Warm Creek Bay.  There, it could disgorge the 
houseboat and its happy passengers, all in a matter  of minutes.
Cove,
  California. However, the opening scene, which depicts his prior crash 
landing in  a spacecraft was filmed at Lake Powell. With such Science 
fiction credibility  already established at Lake Powell, I suggest that 
the “Sandcrawler”,
 a  fictional transport vehicle in the Star Wars universe that is found 
on the  desert planet Tatooine be redeployed to the Castle Rock Cut. 
There it could be utilized as a houseboat transporter. It could scoop up
 a boat from Wahweap Bay,  and then use its many treads to crawl the 
Castle Rock Cut to Warm Creek Bay.  There, it could disgorge the 
houseboat and its happy passengers, all in a matter  of minutes.
 
Back
 in the reality of the twenty-first century, the Castle Rock Cut joined 
the  Bullfrog Main Launch Ramp, Antelope Point Public Launch Ramp, Hite 
Launch Ramp  and Stateline Launch Ramp on the list of closed Lake Powell
 boating facilities.  As of this writing, the main launch ramp at 
Wahweap Marina had an expected  closure date of mid-August 2021. 
Recently, the National Park Service (NPS) began  preparing a smaller, 
“Auxiliary Ramp” not used since the 1960s. It will  be able to launch or
 retrieve only two boats at a time. The NPS was also  preparing the 
Stateline Auxiliary Launch Ramp for limited use later this year.  
Neither auxiliary ramp will accommodate houseboats over thirty-six feet 
in  length.
 
Thinking back to the original  Planet of the Apes movie,
 I imagined an event  thousands of years from now. An errant spaceship, 
piloted by a descendant of  Elon Musk might aim his disabled spacecraft 
for the dead pool of Lake Powell.  Assuming a successful water landing, 
the survivors might hike out in the  direction of what once was Wahweap 
Bay. There, Elon the 125th and his crew might  come across the huge 
concrete ramp at Wahweap. With Lake Powell no longer  reaching Wahweap 
Bay, the long concrete ramp at the former Wahweap Marina would  be as 
mysterious as the Pyramids at Giza. The survivors might ask, “What type 
of  spacecraft could have launched from this dry and desolate ramp?”
 
Throughout my own lifetime, the Glen Canyon Dam and Lake Powell have represented  subterfuge,
 boom and bust. As I reflected on that, I knew it was time to go.  
Fifty-six years after my first visit to Wahweap in 1965, I wondered if 
this  would be my last. Having photographically documented the Wahweap  Overlook
 view  for the past fifteen years, I snapped a few more pictures and 
then departed.  What my photos revealed was the continued desiccation of
 Lake Powell. In the  past six years alone, a large section of Wahweap 
Bay had gone dry.
Overlook
 view  for the past fifteen years, I snapped a few more pictures and 
then departed.  What my photos revealed was the continued desiccation of
 Lake Powell. In the  past six years alone, a large section of Wahweap 
Bay had gone dry.
 
Finished in the early 1960s, Wahweap’s concrete launch ramp extended 
farther and  deeper into the lake than any other launch ramp. At the 
time no one imagined  that the surface of Lake Powell
 would ever fall below the end of the concrete  ramp. As I drove away, 
the question in my mind was, “Once it is reduced to a  shadow of its 
former glory, will Wahweap Marina ever again thrive as a pleasure  
boating facility?” I have my doubts.
This concludes Part Four of a Five-Part Article. To read Part Five, click  HERE. To return to Part One, click  HERE.   
By James McGillis at 04:29 PM | Colorado River | Comments (0) | Link

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