The main force on an embankment dam is the force of the water. The
weight of the dam is also a force, but each material has a different
weight, so it is not shown here as one force the way it is on the concrete
dams. The uplift force is also acting on the embankment dam, but some of the
water seeps into the dam so the force is not the same as on a concrete dam.
Roll over the water force to see it on the dam.
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The embankment dam is the only dam type we are introducing that is not made of
concrete. Embankment dams may be made of earth or rock, both of which are
pervious to water -- that is, water can get into it. You see above that
the water will seep into the core material and should stop at the seepage
line. The core material is usually more watertight that the rock or earth
that is on the outside of the dam, but the core material is still not totally
impervious to water. Concrete is not truly impervious either, but it does not
allow as much seepage as these materials do.
The diagram shown above is only one configuration of what an embankment dam
may look like. It could be any combination of earth, rock, and core material
in any number of arrangements. |