35.449995,-83.805303
Fontana Dam
Fontana dam, a multi-purpose dam on the little Tennessee reiver, is 480 feet, TVA’s highest. Begun soon after Pearl Harbor, it was completed in less than three years. Water stored here helps control floods. Released water generates electricity and helps maintain navigation depths on the Tennessee.
The TVA System of Multi-Purpose Dams
The Tennessee river has its headwaters in the mountains of Tennessee, Virginia, North Carolina and Georgia. The main stream forms at Knoxville, where the Holston and the French Broad rivers join.
The valley, 41,000 square miles in area, receives an average of 552 inches of rain a year. In terms of water discharged into the Ohio and Mississippi, the Tennessee river is about equal in size to the Missouri.
The Tennessee Valley Authority has harnessed the river with a multi-purpose system of dams and reservoirs which regulates floods, improves navigation and generates electric power.
High dams on the tributaries create larch storage reservoirs which hold back flood waters, releasing them when necessary to maintain navigation depths downstream, ad at the same time generating electric power. The system also helps protect the lower Ohio and Mississippi valleys.
The nine man river dams, with their locks, forma a navigation channel 650 miles long, from Knoxville to the Ohio River, an important arm of the nation’s inland waterway system connecting 20 states.
Having developed virtually all the river’s power resources, TVA has built huge coal-burning steam electric plants to help server the region’s growing power needs. TVA power is sold at wholesale to cities and rural electric cooperatives which, in turn, distribute it at retail to homes, farms, business and industry. A few industries and U.S. government defense installations that use large amounts of power are served directly by TVA. The largest of these using more than a great city , are the atomic plants at Oak Ridge, Tennessee, and Paducah, Kentucky.
Built for the people of the Unitied States of America