Navajo Reservoir
The construction of the dam and the resulting lake flooded and destroyed one of the Navajos' most sacred sites.
The Lake and associated shoreline areas near the dam in New Mexico and the river shorelines below the dam are part of New Mexico's Navajo Lake State Park, while the Portion of the shoreline and portion of the lake that is located in Colorado make up Navajo State Park which is managed as part of the Colorado State Parks system. The lake has smallmouth bass, black crappie, northern pike, channel catfish, and trout. The waters of Navajo Lake forced hundreds of families to leave their homes and communities. The four communities affected were Los Arboles, Los Pinos, Rose and Los Martinez. The 1.7 million acre-foot reservoir displaced an unknown amount of farms and ranches. It has been estimated that almost 200 families had to move. Some families had been here nearly 80–90 years.
See also
References
- ^ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Navajo Lake
- ^ Linford, Laurance. Navajo Places. History, Legend, Landscape. University of Utah Press. Salt Lake City: 2000.
- ^ Romeo, Jonathan. "Researchers record the stories of communities inundated by Navajo Lake". Durango Herald. Retrieved May 2, 2022.
External links
Media related to Navajo Lake at Wikimedia Commons