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This is a list of dams and reservoirs in the U.S. state of Minnesota and pertinent data in a sortable table. There are more than 1,250 dams in the state. There are more than 1,250 dams in the state. Over 800 are public facilities and of these 430 are owned by the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources .
Lake Byllesby Dam; List of dams and reservoirs in Minnesota; Little Falls Dam; Lock and Dam No. 1; Lock and Dam No. 2; Lock and Dam No. 3; Lock and Dam No. 4; Lock and Dam No. 5; Lock and Dam No. 5A; Lock and Dam No. 6; Lock and Dam No. 7; Lock and Dam No. 8
Lock and Dam No. 3: Red Wing, Minnesota: 796.9 675 feet Owned/operated by U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Mississippi Valley Division, St. Paul District : Lock and Dam No. 4: Alma, Wisconsin
The most visible part of Thomson Dam is the primary structure straddling the Saint Louis River channel near Minnesota State Highway 210. However, the Thomson Project is actually composed of multiple dams and control structures, several of which have been rebuilt and merged over the years.
Blanchard Dam is a dam across the Mississippi River, in Bellevue Township and Swan River Township, Morrison County, near the city of Royalton, Minnesota. [1] Blanchard is a hydroelectric station owned and operated by Minnesota Power. The dam sits slightly upriver from the former Soo Line rail bridge. The bridge now carries a recreational trail.
Ames Mill Dam is a 6-foot (2 m) low-head dam located near South Water Street in Northfield city, in southeastern Minnesota, in the United States. [1] It lies on the Cannon River, a tributary of the Mississippi River 35 miles (55 km) south of St. Paul. Ames Mill was originally built as a wooden dam in 1855 and then rebuilt as one of the six ...
Rapidan Dam is near the city of Mankato, about 90 minutes from Minneapolis, and home to 45,000 people ... The Rapidan Dam in Blue Earth County, Minnesota is breaking down as rushing waters sweep ...
In the Mankato area, where the dam is located, 7 to 8 inches of rain fell over three days, based on an analysis from Kenny Blumenfeld, a senior climatologist at the Minnesota State Climate Office.