The correct answer is:
B. Prevent flooding on the land adjacent to the river.
Understanding Katrina
The following excerpt is from an overview that was provided by Dr. William W. Locke at Montana State University. (2005)
Hurricane History in the Gulf Coast
Hurricanes are not uncommon occurrences along the Gulf and Atlantic coast. They typically strike promontories such as peninsulas or isthmuses rather than bays or inlets. Since 1950, there have been two Category Five storms and seven Category Four storms. Hurricane Katrina made Gulf Coast landfall on August 29th, 2005, as a Category Four storm.
Most of the coastal areas hit by recent (2004-2005) hurricanes have a historical expectation of a direct hit every seven to twenty years. They also have a historical expectation of Category Three hit every fifteen to fifty years, which happens to be within the lifetime of a noncommercial structure.
Hurricanes hit South Florida most frequently, followed by South Texas and the Mississippi River Delta region.
About 100 hurricanes, typhoons, and tropical storms occur globally each year, with ten (plus or minus five) in the Atlantic region. These cycles tend to be longer than El Nino/Southern Oscillation. There has been an increasing number of hurricanes since 1995. There are several possible interpretations of this increase in Atlantic hurricane activity, including natural climatic cycles and warmer ocean temperatures in the North Atlantic.
The Geologic Setting
The eye of Hurricane Katrina made Louisiana landfall near Buras-Triumph on August 29, 2005, at 6:10 AM. By 10:00 AM Central Standard Time, several sections of the levee system in New Orleans had collapsed. The storm surge breached the levee system protecting New Orleans from Lake Ponchartrain and the Mississippi River. Hurricane Katrina also caused heavy damage along the coasts of Mississippi and Alabama.
Much of the damage sustained in Louisiana was due not only to the storm, but also to the unique physiographic setting of New Orleans. Although the Mississippi River enters the Gulf at the South Pass, the river is only about two feet above sea level as it flows through New Orleans. The land surrounding the Mississippi River through New Orleans is at sea level, or lower, on all sides.
Levees can be either natural or man-made. Man-made levees are constructed to prevent flooding on the land adjacent to the river. Natural levees are built by floodwaters depositing sediment along the river banks. They can extend more than two kilometers from the river channel. Natural levees do not protect rivers from large flooding events because they are built by frequent (five to twenty year) recurrent floods. Levees can, however, protect from most ocean-based flooding.
During a severe flood these natural levees breach, which causes flooding and deposition of sediment in wetlands. This wetland flooding is often considered to be a natural means of absorbing floodwaters and thus floodwater does not continue to flow downstream. Where natural levees are heightened and maintained in order to provide flood protection, the floodwater cannot leave the river channel. Thus, the adjacent wetlands (also called a backswamp) do not receive periodic inputs of sediment and floodwater. Normally, rivers do not stand above the backswamp, but New Orleans is an exception. Due to the construction of levees along the river, the backswamp areas have subsided because they no longer receive sediment. This is why much of the area around New Orleans is below sea level. The Mississippi River has aggraded through New Orleans in order to maintain the slope necessary to transport its large sediment load (1 million tons per day) all the way to Southwest Pass.
The Mississippi River Delta has been moving laterally over the last 6,000 years as the river migrates across the delta region. The river typically remains in one spot for less than 1,000 years. During that time sediments build a delta. Once the delta is significantly above sea level, the river channel will migrate to a shorter, more direct route to the ocean. Then the river builds a new delta and the cycle continues. However, the modern delta has remained in place for about 1,300 years. Based on radiocarbon dating of previous late Holocene deltas, the present distributary could/should have been abandoned in the last 300 years in favor of a more efficient route to sea level. The present Mississippi River channel is twice as long and half as steep as shortcuts via the Atchafalaya River or Lake Pontchartrain. If the river were to seek these new courses, then the Mississippi would not flow through New Orleans. The course has been engineered to remain in its present channel and to continue to flow through New Orleans.
Sediment thicknesses on the delta are greatest near the edge of the continental shelf. Thick young sediment accumulations (warm colors) compact and subside rapidly. Areas of older sediment subside more slowly. Levees are continually enlarged, both naturally and by humans, but they must be widened as well. Widening increases their weight, thus increasing local subsidence. It is usually not feasible to design and construct a levee system to withstand any foreseeable flood (except in rare cases such as the flood wall system in St. Louis). So, most levees are vulnerable to overtopping as well as seepage through and under the levee.
Topographically, much of New Orleans lies well below sea level. Sea water gains access to the city through canals, and an uneasy balance between the sea and New Orleans is maintained by roughly 350 miles of levees. Natural levees, reclaimed land along Lake Pontchartrain, and extent of local subsidence are evident.
Hurricane Katrina: The Storm
Hurricane Katrina was both huge and powerful. The well-formed eye is typical of Category Four storms.
Warm seawater is the fuel for hurricanes. The evaporation of abundant water from the ocean allows condensation in the storm, releasing the latent heat stored since evaporation, thus fueling continued storm power. Shallow coastal waters commonly lack cold water that can diffuse storm power.
Hurricane Katrina reached Category Five over the warmest water. In addition, the track of Katrina was normal and generally followed predictions. The point of landfall was accurately estimated almost three days prior hitting the coast of Louisiana. Before that time Hurricane Katrina been predicted to turn north sooner and impact the Florida Panhandle.
In the figure above, you can see that hurricane intensity closely matches the water temperature shown in the figure above. Hurricane Katrina reached Category Five over the warmest water.
Predicted rainfall for Hurricane Katrina showed the maximum rainfall east of the storm-eye track. This accumulation as the storm passed provides evidence for the fact that the right front quadrant of a hurricane is commonly the most powerful. The powerful winds and rain occur here because rotational winds and steering winds (the prevailing winds which govern the smaller winds) are combined.
Multiple Choice Question
Man-made levees opposed to natural made levees are constructed to ___________________.
A.
Cause flooding and deposition of sediment in wetlands.
B.
Prevent flooding on the land adjacent to the river.
C.
Provide a natural means of absorbing floodwaters and thus floodwater does not continue to flow downstream
D.
Protect rivers from large flooding events because they are built by frequent (five to twenty year) recurrent floods.
1 answer
The correct answer is:
B. Prevent flooding on the land adjacent to the river.