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#1
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This is true, You should see the basements of some places in Old Town Sac.
Theres a pretty cool brewery down in one of them called The Hogs Head, or Hogs Breath, something like that. We were really buzzed on Valentines day when we found it. Stayed on the Delta King that night. "Bob Fry" wrote in message ... "D" == Doug writes: D Not as crazy as it sounds. Dig a big lake, convey the dirt D over. All the houses worth saving, raise them up on a new D foundation. The skycrapers, just make the bottom floor a D basement. Expensive? Yes, but a permanent solution. Better than D it happening again. It's been done befo "After yet another massive flood in 1862, an ambitious project to actually raise [Sacramento] above flood level was undertaken. Evidence of the tens of thousands of cubic yards of earth and miles of masonry work used to raise the streets can still be seen today in Old Sacramento." And the downtown if you know where to look. |
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Doug wrote:
Expensive? Yes, but a permanent solution. Not at all. When New Orleans was settled, it was above sea level. The ground has subsided and is continuing to do so. George Patterson Give a person a fish and you feed him for a day; teach a person to use the Internet and he won't bother you for weeks. |
#3
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George Patterson ) wrote:
: Doug wrote: : : Expensive? Yes, but a permanent solution. : : Not at all. When New Orleans was settled, it was above sea level. The : ground has subsided and is continuing to do so. : The Mississippi has contributed to the problem by building its own bed too high... http://www.uh.edu/engines/epi1135.htm No. 1135: Ol' Man River "...But here the Mississippi has built its own bed too high, and is ready to leave it. That threat has been mounting steadily. By WW-II, a third of the Mississippi was overflowing into the Old River and from there to the Atchafalaya River. The Atchafalaya meanders down through the Cajun parishes of south central Louisiana. It was about to become the outlet of the Mississippi. The Corps of Engineers responded by building dams and locks. The Mississippi has been jumping about like that for thousands of years. Most of Louisiana is made of sand and silt dumped by the River. The Mississippi was shifting its bed during the Trojan Wars. It was shifting again while the Romans built their aqueducts. The Battle of Hastings occurred during its last major move. Today, a striking feature of the Louisiana map is a long arm of land reaching from New Orleans to the southeast, far into the Gulf -- the lengthening bed of the Mississippi. That arm of silt was a mere stump in my 1898 Britannica. [snip] We've contained the Mississippi's attempt to move for a while. But move it will -- sooner or later. One big flood and it will break through those fragile barricades to reach the low ground it hungers for. When that happens, two hundred miles of fresh-water ports will be left dry, unless we cut a salt-water trench across Louisiana. Many observers look on attempts to hold the Mississippi as pure hubris. One says, The three most arrogant human projects imaginable are, in descending order, to steal the sun, to make the rivers run backward, and to contain the Mississippi. The longer we hold this tiger by the tail, the more committed we are to a task that's more difficult every year. The Mississippi warns us, yet again, that nature's intent is inexorable. Nature will yield to our will -- but only so far, and only for a while..." --Jerry Leslie Note: is invalid for email |
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On 31 Aug 2005 17:24:09 -0700, "Doug"
wrote: Not as crazy as it sounds. Dig a big lake, convey the dirt over. Actually, the problem seems to be that there IS a big lake, Ponchatrain (however spelled). It leaked into New Orleans, causing the big flood. It wasn't the storm surge that caused the problem, but Ponchatrain. -- all the best, Dan Ford email (put Cubdriver in subject line) Warbird's Forum: www.warbirdforum.com Piper Cub Forum: www.pipercubforum.com the blog: www.danford.net In Search of Lost Time: www.readingproust.com |
#5
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Cub Driver wrote:
On 31 Aug 2005 17:24:09 -0700, "Doug" wrote: Not as crazy as it sounds. Dig a big lake, convey the dirt over. Actually, the problem seems to be that there IS a big lake, Ponchatrain (however spelled). It leaked into New Orleans, causing the big flood. It wasn't the storm surge that caused the problem, but Ponchatrain. That is one problem. Another is the fact that we've forced the river there to stay inside a channel that we've defined, so it's no longer dumping its load of sediment all over the countryside. The Mississippi is not called "The Big Muddy" for nothing! |
#6
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I'm glad to see that we can discuss OT without any one bitching about
it being OT. Bryan "The Monk" Chaisone |
#7
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I'm glad to see that we can discuss OT without any one bitching about
it being OT. Larry must be in a meeting... ;-) -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#8
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I visited New Orleans a couple of years ago. Flew into Lakefront. One
thing that struck me. When you are in New Orleans, the river and the lake are "up there". Usually the river and lake are "down there". Something wrong with that picture I said to myself. Water flows DOWNHILL |
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