Melton Hill Dam | |
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Official name | Melton Hill Dam |
Location | Oak Ridge, Tennessee and Lenoir City, Tennessee |
Coordinates | 35°53′7″N 84°18′0″W / 35.88528°N 84.30000°W |
Construction began | September 6, 1960 |
Opening date | May 1, 1963 |
Operator(s) | Tennessee Valley Authority |
Dam and spillways | |
Impounds | Clinch River |
Height | 103 feet (31 m) |
Length | 1,020 feet (310 m) |
Reservoir | |
Creates | Melton Hill Lake |
Power Station | |
Turbines | 2 |
Installed capacity | 72 MW |
Melton Hill Dam is a hydroelectric dam on the Clinch River just south of Oak Ridge, Tennessee, United States. The dam is operated by the Tennessee Valley Authority, which built the dam in the early 1960s to extend the Tennessee Valley's continuous navigation channel up the Clinch as far as Clinton and to increase TVA's overall power-generating capacity. The dam impounds the 5,470-acre (2,210 ha) Melton Hill Lake, and is the only TVA tributary dam serviced by a navigation lock. The dam and associated infrastructure were listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2017.
Melton Hill Dam was named for a knob atop nearby Copper Ridge where the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey installed a triangulation station in 1884.[1]