Galesville Reservoir

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Coordinates42°50′46″N 123°09′43″W / 42.846°N 123.162°W / 42.846; -123.162
TypeReservoir
PartofUpper Cow Creek Watershed
Galesville Reservoir
Galesville Reservoir is located in Oregon
Galesville Reservoir
Galesville Reservoir
Galesville Reservoir is located in the United States
Galesville Reservoir
Galesville Reservoir
LocationKlamath Mountains
Douglas County, Oregon
Coordinates42°50′46″N 123°09′43″W / 42.846°N 123.162°W / 42.846; -123.162
TypeReservoir
Part ofUpper Cow Creek Watershed
River sourcesCow Creek
Catchment area64.7 square miles (168 km2)
Basin countriesUnited States
Managing agencyUS Forest Service
Built1986 (1986)
Surface area640 acres (260 ha)
Surface elevation1,900 feet (580 m)
SettlementsAzalea, Oregon
Location
Interactive map of Galesville Reservoir

Galesville Reservoir is a water storage reservoir in Klamath Mountains of Douglas County, Oregon. The dam was completed in October 1986.

This reservoir is the outlet of the Upper Cow Creek Watershed, which contains 47,482.5 acres (19,215.5 ha) of land. The dam was proposed in a 1966 research document as a water storage dam, with a targeted completion date of 1975.[1] The dam does not include a fish ladder, so it acts as a complete fish passage barrier.[2]

67% of the watershed is owned by the US Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management, with 7% owned by the state and county. The remainder is privately owned. Nearly all of the land (98.7%) is used for forestry. The reservoir has a higher-than-allowed level of mercury as described by the Clean Water Act.[2][3] Several historic mining claims above the reservoir exist, such as the Red Cloud Mine, which was established to extract mercury from veins of cinnabar.[4]

Chief Miwaleta RV Park and Campground, a county park, is located on the shores of the reservoir.[5] The upper portion of the reservoir is a wildlife area.[6]

The name "Galesville" comes from a small town in the Cow Creek Valley. The location was a post office established in 1854 with George F. Hall as the first postmaster. It was closed in 1916. Legend has it that the initial two settlers were Gale and Goshen, who named it Galesville.[7]

The dam was used in the 2013 movie Night Moves.[8]

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