Hard Labor Creek Regional Reservoir

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hard_Labor_Creek_Regional_Reservoir an entity of type: Thing

Hard Labor Creek Regional Reservoir is a 1,370-acre (550 ha) artificial reservoir in a region on the south-east side of unincorporated Walton County, Georgia, United States, near both Social Circle and Rutledge, about 40 miles (64 km) east of Atlanta. It features a Category I earthen dam constructed primarily for municipal water supply, with a secondary consideration of recreation, on Hard Labor Creek. The dam is approximately 1,950 feet (590 m) long, 460 feet (140 m) wide, and 94 feet (29 m) high, with a spillway crest elevation of 700 feet (210 m) above mean sea level (MSL). rdf:langString
rdf:langString Hard Labor Creek Regional Reservoir
rdf:langString Hard Labor Creek Regional Reservoir
rdf:langString Hard Labor Creek Regional Reservoir
xsd:float 33.68222045898438
xsd:float -83.63416290283203
xsd:integer 45296250
xsd:integer 1083605744
rdf:langString Eastern Continental Divide watershed , United States
rdf:langString at dam
rdf:langString summer
rdf:langString winter
rdf:langString On Hard Labor Creek, with pump diversion from the Apalachee River; Reedy Creek
rdf:langString Georgia #USA
rdf:langString Location of Hard Labor Creek Regional Reservoir in Georgia, USA.
rdf:langString Reservoir Dam/Reservoir Construction: March–April 2015 Reservoir Fills: 2015 - 2018 Reservoir Full Pool: 2018
xsd:string 33.68222222222222 -83.63416666666667
rdf:langString Hard Labor Creek Regional Reservoir is a 1,370-acre (550 ha) artificial reservoir in a region on the south-east side of unincorporated Walton County, Georgia, United States, near both Social Circle and Rutledge, about 40 miles (64 km) east of Atlanta. It features a Category I earthen dam constructed primarily for municipal water supply, with a secondary consideration of recreation, on Hard Labor Creek. The dam is approximately 1,950 feet (590 m) long, 460 feet (140 m) wide, and 94 feet (29 m) high, with a spillway crest elevation of 700 feet (210 m) above mean sea level (MSL). First proposed in 1997, built in response to the growing controversy over the Tri-state water dispute, the State of Georgia with its 52 watershed regions drains primarily into either the Gulf of Mexico, or the Atlantic, with the reservoir existing in the Upper Oconee River watershed, which ultimately drains into the latter.
xsd:double 24.9936
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3894
xsd:double 5544193.298688
xsd:double 213.36
<Geometry> POINT(-83.634162902832 33.682220458984)

data from the linked data cloud