Tabaqah Dam
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Tabaqah Dam (Arabic: سد الفرات) (sometimes called the Euphrates Dam) is an earth filled dam nearly 197 feet (60 meters) high and 3 miles (5 km) long (located at ) in Syria. It was completed in 1973 on the Euphrates River. The dam holds the waters of Lake Assad (center to left center of the image), a 50-mile (80 km) long and 5-mile (8 km) wide reservoir. Lake Assad and the Tabaqah Dam have not only provided increased hydroelectric power, but the lake has doubled Syria’s irrigated land. Actual crop production has not reached the goals set by the Syrian government due to a number of problems including the gypsum subsoil of the region, and whether or not farmers could be attracted back from urban areas andother more populous agricultural areas to this sparsely populated area. Water levels within Lake Assad remain low due in part to construction of the Keban and Atatürk Dams in Turkey, which has reduced the water flow of the Euphrates River in Syria.

