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Cedar Creek Lake is a fourth water source for Tarrant Regional Water District's water supply. Its normal system capacity is 322.00 ft (98.15 m) above sea level. When the lake gets over that point, gates from the spillway are opened, releasing water; 2005 and 2006 were dry years, sending the lake to a record low on December 12, 2006.
Fayette County Reservoir is a power station cooling reservoir on Cedar Creek in the Colorado River basin, [1] 3 miles west of Fayetteville, Texas and 10 miles east of La Grange, Texas. [2] The reservoir was created in 1978 when a dam was built on the creek to provide a cooling pond for the Fayette Power Project which provides electrical ...
Cedar Creek is a creek in Kaufman County, Van Zandt County, and Henderson County in Texas. It is a tributary to the Trinity River . The creek's impoundment forms the reservoir named Cedar Creek Lake .
Cedar Creek Islands WMA Henderson County: 160 acres Three islands in Cedar Creek Reservoir. [26] Area 2 Chaparral WMA La Salle County and Dimmit County: 15,200 Purchased from the Light family in 1969, as a research and demonstration facility, with funds provided by the Pittman–Robertson Act. In 2008 a destructive fire burned over 60,000 acres ...
Lady Bird Lake (formerly Town Lake) Lake La Joya; Lake Creek Lake; Lake Fork Reservoir; Lake Lavon; Lake Leon (Eastland County, Texas) Lake Leon (Pecos County, Texas) Lewisville Lake; Lake Limestone; Lake Livingston; Lone Star Lake; Lost Creek Reservoir; Lake Lyndon B. Johnson; Lake O' the Pines
Kirby Lake is a 740-acre man-made reservoir located on the south side of Abilene, Texas, just east of Highway 83, in the northeastern portion of Taylor County. [1] Kirby Lake is within the Brazos River Basin, meaning that Cedar Creek, which feeds Kirby Lake, eventually feeds into the Brazos River. [2]
Cleburne State Park is a 528-acre (2.14 km 2) Texas state park in Johnson County, Texas operated by the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department. The park includes the 116-acre (0.47 km 2), spring-fed Cedar Lake that was created by construction of an earthen dam by the Civilian Conservation Corps. The park is reached via US 67 to Park Road 21.
It provides raw water for over 2.1 million people, implements vital flood control measures and creates recreational opportunities for the residents of 11 North Texas Counties. Today, TRWD is led by a publicly elected five-member board and owns/operates four major reservoirs, including Lake Bridgeport , Eagle Mountain Lake , Cedar Creek ...