geo.wikisort.org - ReservoirThese are U.S. towns and villages flooded by the creation of dams, destroyed by the advancing sea, or washed away in floods and never rebuilt.
Arkansas
- Monte Ne, submerged under Beaver Lake
- Napoleon
- Bull Shoals Lake
California
- Baird, under Lake Shasta[1]
- Cedar Springs, under Silverwood Lake[2]
- Copper City, under Lake Shasta[1]
- Elmore, under Lake Shasta[1]
- Etter, under Lake Shasta[1]
- Kennett, under Lake Shasta[1]
- Monticello, under Lake Berryessa[3]
- Morley, under Lake Shasta[1]
- Pitt, under Lake Shasta[1]
- Winthrop, under Lake Shasta[1]
Colorado
Connecticut
Georgia
- Etowah ,GA Allatoona Lake
- Petersburg, GA Strom Thurmond Lake (Clarks Hill Lake)
Indiana
Kentucky
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Missouri
Mississippi
Montana
Nevada
New York
- Arena, flooded by Pepacton Reservoir
- Boiceville, flooded by Ashokan Reservoir
- Brown's Station, flooded by Ashokan Reservoir
- Cannonsville, flooded by Cannonsville Reservoir
- Elko, flooded by Allegheny Reservoir
- Gilboa, flooded by Schoharie Reservoir and relocated
- Glenford, flooded by Ashokan Reservoir and relocated
- Kensico, flooded by Kensico Reservoir
- Neversink, flooded by Neversink Reservoir and relocated
- Olive, flooded by Ashokan Reservoir
- Olive Bridge, flooded by Ashokan Reservoir and relocated
- Pepacton, flooded by Pepacton Reservoir
- Shavertown, flooded by Pepacton Reservoir
- Shokan, flooded by Ashokan Reservoir
- Stony Hollow, flooded by Ashokan Reservoir
- West Hurley, flooded by Ashokan Reservoir and relocated
- West Shokan, flooded by Ashokan Reservoir
North Carolina
- Judson, flooded by Fontana Lake[12]
- Proctor, flooded by Fontana Lake
- Long Island, NC Lake Norman (North Carolina)
- East Monbo, NC Lake Norman (North Carolina)
- Fonta Flora, NC Lake James (North Carolina)
New Jersey
Oregon
- Arlington, flooded by Lake Umatilla but relocated
- Bayocean, destroyed by erosion into the Pacific Ocean
- Blalock, inundated by the backwaters from the John Day Dam
- Celilo, flooded by Lake Celilo
- Champoeg, destroyed by the Great Flood of 1862
- Copper, under Applegate Reservoir
- Detroit, inundated by Detroit Lake and relocated
- Dorena, flooded by Dorena Reservoir and relocated
- Homestead, possibly under the Hells Canyon Reservoir
- Linn City, destroyed by the Great Flood of 1862
- Orleans, destroyed by the Great Flood of 1862
- Robinette, under Brownlee Reservoir
- Vanport, destroyed by the flooding of the Columbia River
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
Tennessee
- Butler, TN Watauga Lake (Tennessee)
- Loyston, TN Norris Lake (Tennessee)
- Willow Grove, TN Dale hollow lake (Tennessee)
- Morganton, TN Tellico lake (Tennessee)
Utah
Washington
References
- "Once a Californian Boom Town, Now a Sunken City at the Bottom of a Lake". 29 March 2017.
- "This San Bernardino Mountains community was swallowed by a lake". 11 December 2019.
- "Lost Beneath Lake Berryessa". 16 December 2019.
- "Is There Really a Town Called Jerusalem and a Graveyard Under Candlewood Lake?".
- Cassie, Ron (March 4, 2019). ""Rumor or Fact? A Town Under Loch Raven Reservoir". Baltimore Magazine. Retrieved November 6, 2019.
- "Ben Lomond Landing, Mississippi". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior.
- Google (March 2, 2019). "Ben Lomond Landing, Mississippi" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved March 2, 2019.
- Hall, Russell S.; Nowell, Princella W.; Childress, Stacy (2000). Washington County, Mississippi. Arcadia. p. 7. ISBN 9780738506555.
- U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Port Anderson (historical)
- Google (October 3, 2019). "Port Anderson, Mississippi" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved October 3, 2019.
- Crider, Bill (July 11, 1954). "Mississippi River Uncovering Community it Buried Years Ago". St. Joseph News-Press.
- Tennessee Valley Authority, The Fontana Project: A Comprehensive Report on the Planning, Design, Construction, and Initial Operations of the Fontana Project, Technical Report No. 12 (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1950), pp. 1-13, 43-45, 453.
- "The Tragic Story Behind the Village That Was Flooded to Make Way for New Jersey's Round Valley Reservoir".
- Morgan, Michele (7 Oct 1993). "Under Blue Waters Lake Nockamixon's Depths Contain Remnants of Tohickon Village". mcall.com. The Morning Call. Retrieved 4 May 2021.
External links
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