Laserfiche WebLink
<br />4 <br /> <br />LAWN LAKE DAM AND CASCADE LAKE DAM FAILURES, COLORADO <br /> <br />descends over a steep cliff into Lawn Lake. Downstream <br />from Lawn Lake, a broad, till-covered valley extends <br />southeast for about 0.5 mi; then the valley turns south, <br />Slopes range from 5 to 26 percent, and average 10 per. <br />cent along the Roaring River (fig. 2). Mean annual <br />precipitation in the area varies with elevation, ranging <br />from 20 in. at Estes Park to 40 in. or more on the Con. <br />tinental Divide above Lawn Lake. <br />Downstream from Lawn Lake, the Roaring River de- <br />scends over a series of steep bedrock falls and through <br />gentle mountain meadows. The Roaring River valley <br />and the Fall River valley were repeatedly glaciated dur- <br />ing the Pleistocene Epoch. Landforms and sediments <br />along the course of the flood bear strong imprints of <br />this glacial activity (Jones and Quam, 1944; Richmond, <br />1960). Lawn Lake is at tree line; along the Roaring <br />River, vegetation consists of spruce, fir, and aspen for- <br />ests. Where the Roaring River joins the Fall River at <br />an elevation of 8,550 ft in the west end of Horseshoe <br />Park, the Roaring River descends 500 ft in 0.3 mi in a <br />series of rapids known collectively as Horseshoe Falls <br />(fig. 1). <br /> <br />Horseshoe Park is a flat, moraine-rimmed basin that <br />was occupied by a large glacial lake when terminal <br />moraines dammed the Fall River at the east end of the <br />park. The hills surrounding Horseshoe Park are covered <br />with ponderosa and lodgepole pines and aspen forests. <br />The floor of Horseshoe Park is 0.5 mi wide and 3 mi <br />long. and is underlain by ground moraine, outwash. and <br />lacustrine sediments. Valley slope is relatively flat, <br />averaging 0.7 percent. The park is covered by meadow <br />grass; dense willows mark the meandering course of the <br />Fall River through the park. Sinuosity of the Fall River <br />in Horseshoe Park downstream from the Roaring River <br />is 2.2, compared to 1.0 to 1.05 for other steeper moun- <br />tain streams in Rocky Mountain National Park. <br />The Fall River flows into Cascade Lake at the east <br />end of Horseshoe Park. Cascade Lake, located about <br />5.3 mi west of Estes Park, was an artificial lake private- <br />ly built in 1908 and obtained by Estes Park for power <br />generation in 1945. Downstream from Cascade Lake, <br />the Fall River gradient steepens again to 9 percent <br />as it flows through a series of Pleistocene terminal <br />moraines and into Aspenglen Campground (fig. 2). <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> 12,000 <br /> . <br /> ~ <br /> . <br /> ~ <br /> 0 <br /> ~ E <br /> ., <br /> ~" <br /> 11,000 --- <br /> " <br /> 0 <br />:J , <br />w 0 <br />> 50 <br />w " <br />~ E <br />.. . <br />w U N <br />'" ~ W <br />z 10,000 ;~ .... M <br />.. (i; " w <br />w -=c E' 0 .... ~ <br />::; ~af:! , (i; > <br />w ~-S]! . 0 ~ <br />.... " 50 <br />.. =.- > . " 0 <br /> ..= ~~ ... ~ E 0 <br />::; M 3 . <br />x 00. > . " <br /> -0.2'0 . . u 0 E <br />0 9000 Ou ~ -" 0 .g ~ 0 <br />0: '0' ~ W . . w ~ ~ <br />"- :r,o '" u 0. 0 .... w <br /> .... . <br />"- ,.... r - . 0 '0 (i; '" t:~ <br />:! "'u . 0 <br /> " 0. o' OJ <Ilw <br /> . c:~ !::: <br />.... .. ~ .g oS E <br />w '----v---J 0 .g CI). <br />W 0 .~ . <br />~ ;; . . " <br /> Horseshoe Park 0 - . <br />;:: '" . - . <br /> .9 . , <br /> 9000 0 u O>w " <br />Z '0. 0 .5 QI E <br />0 . , O>~ > <br /> '" . . <br />>= , "'~ 0 <br />.. <br />> <br />w <br />~ <br />w <br /> <br />7000 <br /> <br />, I- <br /> <br />Roaring River <br /> <br />6000 <br />o <br /> <br /> <br />4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 <br />DISTANCE DOWNSTREAM FROM LAWN LAKE DAM, IN MILES <br /> <br />15 <br /> <br />2 <br /> <br />3 <br /> <br />Fal/River <br /> <br />1I ~Big Thompson River <br /> <br />13 <br /> <br />16 <br /> <br />14 <br /> <br />FIGURE 2.-Long profile of flood path of the water from Lawn Lake dam and Cascade Lake dam failures. Vertical exaggeration <br />10.5 times. <br />