{"id":10372,"date":"2024-02-02T07:35:12","date_gmt":"2024-02-02T06:35:12","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.aboutriver.com\/?p=10372"},"modified":"2024-02-02T07:35:12","modified_gmt":"2024-02-02T06:35:12","slug":"how-many-times-has-a-mississippi-river-levee-flooded","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aboutriver.com\/how-many-times-has-a-mississippi-river-levee-flooded\/","title":{"rendered":"How Many Times Has A Mississippi River Levee Flooded"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Heavy rains, poor maintenance, and a hurricane’s storm surge can quickly break a levee, resulting in the devastating but preventable Mississippi River floods. The floods occur when levees – the protective earthen embankment – within that system are topped, overtopped, or breached. The Mississippi River is mainly held back with levees, which are lined with pumped-out water, with locks to help keep ships from colliding and to help keep them in the correct direction. This has not always been the case though, in the past one of the most common causes of flooding was heavy flooding or overtopping of the levees. <\/p>\n

The Mississippi River levee system is split into several sectors, the most severe flooding occurs on the Lower Mississippi section, stretching from the states Louisiana to Mississippi. Since the start of the 20th century, due to a combination of increasingly strong storms and lessened concern over the weak levees, the number of floods of this region have increased dramatically. <\/p>\n

In the summer of 1927, a widespread flood of the Lower Mississippi River occurred. With the worst damage occurring in Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and parts of Tennessee. By the time the floodwaters receded in early fall more than 23,000 square miles were submerged, 27,000 people homeless, and about 500 were drowned. <\/p>\n

Since then, Mississippi River levees have flooded many times and those in Arkansas and Louisiana generally faced higher damage due to the impact of winds from hurricanes and their storm surge on the fragile barrier islands in the Gulf of Mexico that block off the main stem of the Mississippi. In 1993, after flooding for 68 of 72 days and overpassing the levee, water reached 54.7 feet in Vicksburg, MS due to Tropical Storm Alberto. <\/p>\n