Riddlewire
Master
- Joined
- Jul 12, 2007
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Since pretty much all of our land is under water at the moment and I won't be doing any work for a while, I figured I'd let people know what is going on here in the lower Mississippi River Valley.
A triple dose of flood waters (rain, then snow, now rain again) is threatening most of the lands along the Mississippi River from Missouri down to the Gulf. Most people outside this area think "So what? Those dumb rednecks shouldn't live in a flood zone!". Yeah, maybe so. But this fascinating article suggests that our problems could become everyone's problem under certain conditions.
Mississippi Rising: Apocalypse Now?
Yeah, that's a lot of reading to do. It's easier just to click on the link and read it at the website (and see the pics). And make sure to click on the 'Update' at the bottom. That's where you'll read this little interesting tidbit:
A triple dose of flood waters (rain, then snow, now rain again) is threatening most of the lands along the Mississippi River from Missouri down to the Gulf. Most people outside this area think "So what? Those dumb rednecks shouldn't live in a flood zone!". Yeah, maybe so. But this fascinating article suggests that our problems could become everyone's problem under certain conditions.
Mississippi Rising: Apocalypse Now?
But the real threat posed by this historic, gathering flood may well lie several hundred miles to the south, where the Mississippi crosses the Louisiana border. There, as the Corps well knows but dare not discuss, this historic flood threatens to overwhelm one of the frailest defenses industrial humanity has offered to preserve its profits from the immutable processes of nature. This flood has the potential to be a mortal blow to the economy of the United States, and outside the Corp of Engineers virtually no one knows why.
There is an event coming to the Deep South that is as inevitable, and as imminent in geologic time, and as unpredictable in human time, and as dangerous to human life and enterprise, as are the Great California Earthquakes. It is as easy to say as it is hard to imagine: the Mississippi River is going to change course, and when it does will reach the sea 65 miles west of New Orleans, at Morgan City.
If the river succeeded in doing what it had always done, it would leave high and dry the Port of New Orleans, devastate the city's economy as well as that of Baton Rouge, cut off nearly 20 per cent of the country's oil imports and 16 per cent of the nation's fisheries harvest, and choke off a major outlet for U.S. Agricultural exports. It would leave high and dry a chain of refineries and factories stretching from Baton Rouge to New Orleans that depend for their existence on the barges and the fresh water that the river wants to give to the Atchafalaya.
The river will win this war, and will go to Morgan City, and bring down the Control Structures and with them the economy of the United States. As a study conducted by the Water Resources Research Institute, at Louisiana State University, concluded: "It could happen next year, during the next decade, or sometime in the next thirty or forty years. But the final outcome is simply a matter of time and it is only prudent to prepare for it."Â
Yeah, that's a lot of reading to do. It's easier just to click on the link and read it at the website (and see the pics). And make sure to click on the 'Update' at the bottom. That's where you'll read this little interesting tidbit:
Yesterday, a Federal judge ruled that the Corps can go ahead with its plans to blow the levee at Birds Point, Missouri, in order to draw off surplus river water into a floodway that was prepared for that purpose pursuant to the 1928 legislation. But that floodway is now 130,000 acres of prime Missouri farmland. Although the purpose of using the floodway is to reduce pressure on the entire, gargantuan system of levees downstream all the way to the Gulf, Missourians have seized on the idea that it would benefit Cairo, Illinois, just upstream from Bird Point. The politicians have turned it into a state vs. state, farm vs. city, local vs. Washington kind of fight, with the extra garnish that the population of Cairo is mostly black, and Missouri farmers are mostly not.