Copperlode Falls Dam
The reservoir is named Lake Morris after Cairns City engineer Frank Roland Morris who discovered its site, but the dam itself is named after the waterfalls it replaced - Copperlode Falls.
History
Originally Cairns' water needs were met with water drawn from Freshwater Creek and Behana Creek. It was evident to even the earliest settlers that a larger source of water would need to be secured as Cairns grew.
With this in mind, one of the city's engineers, F Morris, explored the Lamb Range to the west of the city to find a place to build a dam. In 1935, he found a site at Copperlode falls, near the headwaters of Freshwater Creek, that he thought would be suitable. Many years later, after a series of surveys confirmed the site's suitability, the Queensland Government approved the site for construction of an earth and rock fill dam.
The State Government originally set aside A$3 million for the dam, but by the time the dam was completed on 25 March 1976, the total cost had risen to approximately $6.5 million. The reservoir holds 38,475 megalitres of water (in comparison to Lake Tinaroo's 407,000 megalitres).
A reinforced masonry wall was added to the dam crest in 1993 to prevent waves from overtopping the wall in the event of extreme floods.
From 2015 the dam has been stocked with barramundi fingerlings.
See also
References
- ^ "Copperlode Falls Dam – dam wall in the Cairns Region (entry 48982)". Queensland Place Names. Queensland Government. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
- ^ Mounter, Brendan; Calcino, Chris; Stephen, Adam (16 December 2023). "Fears spillway net removal could kill off trophy-sized barramundi in wake of ex-Tropical Cyclone Jasper". ABC News. Retrieved 23 December 2023.
- ^ "Lake Morris – reservoir in Cairns Region (entry 22859)". Queensland Place Names. Queensland Government. Retrieved 18 March 2018.