Leslie Dam

Leslie Dam
Location 12km West of Warwick
Coordinates 28°13′03″S 151°54′58″E / 28.2176°S 151.916°E / -28.2176; 151.916Coordinates: 28°13′03″S 151°54′58″E / 28.2176°S 151.916°E / -28.2176; 151.916
Type reservoir
Primary outflows Sandy Creek
Catchment area 603 km²
Basin countries Australia
Surface area 1288ha
Max. depth 28.9m
Water volume 106,200 ML [1]
Surface elevation 472.4m
References [1]

Leslie Dam is located ten kilometres from Warwick Central Business District in Queensland, Australia. Freshwater fishing and water sports facilities are available.

The dam was named after Patrick Leslie (1815–1881), an early settler in the region and the first person to buy land in Warwick.

Patrick Leslie, statue in the park adjacent to the dam

SunWater is undertaking a dam spillway capacity upgrade program to ensure a consistently high level of safety for the dams under their control, of which the Leslie is one of them. The spillway will be upgraded in the longer term.[2]

History

The dam was extended in 1986, increasing capacity by 100%. The dams highest level was reached on the 12 September 1988 when waters in the dam peaked at 20 cm above the spillway.[3] The next highest level was 13 cm above the spillway on the 28 May 1990. On 11 February 1995, the dam reached its lowest level ever of 3% capacity.[3]

On the night of the 5 January 2011, the dam spilled for the first time in more than two decades.[3] All seven floodgates were opened. The resulting high waters in Sandy Creek closed the Cunningham Highway. The following day SunWater reduced the release rate after requests by Warwick's mayor.

Fishing

A Stocked Impoundment Permit is required to fish in the dam.[4]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Sunwater Current Water Storage Information
  2. Spillway Capacity Upgrade Program Archived February 13, 2008, at the Wayback Machine.
  3. 1 2 3 Jeremy Sollars and Casandra Garvey (7 January 2011). "Highway to west re-opened". Warwick Daily News. The Warwick Newspaper Pty Limited. Retrieved 22 March 2011.
  4. Fishing in Queensland dams? You may need a permit. Archived August 29, 2007, at the Wayback Machine.


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