Chouteau Lock & Dam
Chouteau Lock & Dam, also identified as Chouteau Lock & Dam 17, is 17th lock and dam of the McClellan-Kerr Arkansas River Navigation System from the Mississippi River to its terminus at the Tulsa Port of Catoosa, and is the first lock and dam on the Verdigris River in Oklahoma, just above the Three Forks junction with the Arkansas River. The lock is about northwest of Okay in Wagoner County, Oklahoma. Construction of this facility started in 1966 and was completed in 1970. The estimated cost of Chouteau Lock & Dam was $ 31.8 million.
The lock and dam was named for the family of Auguste Pierre Chouteau, who was a pioneer European that settled in this area during the late 18th and early 19th Century.
Reservoir description
Chouteau Reservoir extends for to the next system on the Verdigris River, Newt Graham Lock & Dam. Its surface covers . Normal capacity of the reservoir is. Its drainage area is The lock chamber, like all chambers on the MKARNS, is wide by long. The lift isDam description
The Chouteau Dam is gravity type, of earthen construction. Built on a rock foundation, its height is, and length is. The maximum discharge rate is.Recreation
Fishing and hunting
The MKARNS is often referred to as "the Ditch" by fishermen, who find the waterway an excellent source of fish, especially largemouth and white bass. Other species normally present are: crappie, channel catfish, flatheads and sunfish. Persons fishing from boats are cautioned to watch for submerged tree stumps and logs.Hunting is allowed in the Wildlife Management Area. Principal game species include: white tailed deer, dove, quail squirrel, rabbit, turkey and several species of migratory water fowl..