Louisiana coastal restoration curbed by too little sediment; these states have too much
Tucked between South Dakota and Nebraska is a whole lot of what could be Louisiana.
A growing mountains worth of Missouri River silt and sand that would have flowed to the Mississippi River and down to Louisiana has instead been trapped behind a border dam 85 miles southwest of Sioux Falls. The pile pressed against Gavins Point Dam wont be spreading across the Mississippi Delta, where it could help rebuild Louisianas unraveling coastline.
How much is there now is a number that cant be comprehended, said river engineer Rollin Hotchkiss. But the rate at which the sediment pile grows is an exhaustively studied and mind-boggling fact. About 5 million tons of sediment flows into the reservoir behind the dam each year. Thats enough material to fill the Mercedes-Benz Superdome to the rafters. Pour that much sediment across the Louisiana coast, as the state did during the restoration of Scofield Island in 2013, and it would create more than a square mile of new land.
And Gavins Point is only the smallest in a chain of six dams built between the 1940s and 1960s to tame a river that drains a vast basin stretching into 10 states and two Canadian provinces. While the Gavins dam reservoir is filling up fast and causing a range of problems from flooding roads to raising the groundwater table the upriver reservoirs have much larger capacities that could take on sediment well beyond the next century. The full load of trapped sediment on the Missouri is almost unfathomable.
Read more: https://www.nola.com/news/environment/article_497596b2-8d69-11eb-85a0-5f157115365e.html