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Why is the river so low?

Posted on 8/31/12 at 10:37 am
Posted by rintintin
Life is Life
Member since Nov 2008
16153 posts
Posted on 8/31/12 at 10:37 am
May be a dumb question, but I walked along the levee in the French quarter last night and was expecting to see the river higher than ever, but it was the lowest I've ever seen. Waves were actually washing up on the bank wich was visible below the rocks.
Posted by Cold Pizza
Member since Sep 2011
7639 posts
Posted on 8/31/12 at 10:41 am to
Isaac sucked all the water out.
Posted by JasonL79
Member since Jan 2010
6397 posts
Posted on 8/31/12 at 10:43 am to
There is a huge drought up north and in the midwest right now that has the river the lowest it has been in like 20+ years. Lots of river traffic has been shut down up north because of this.
Posted by ksayetiger
Centenary Gents
Member since Jul 2007
68258 posts
Posted on 8/31/12 at 10:45 am to
it takes a long while for the water to travel. aint rocket science. and as said, it started so low it may not rise very much, considering the capacity of the mighty miss
Posted by DaBeerz
Member since Sep 2004
16882 posts
Posted on 8/31/12 at 11:00 am to
Dry air!
Posted by double d
Amarillo by morning
Member since Jun 2004
16401 posts
Posted on 8/31/12 at 11:17 am to
The river has been low for months due to the drought, and good thing or else more areas would have flooded.
Posted by Bullfrog
Institutionalized but Unevaluated
Member since Jul 2010
56121 posts
Posted on 8/31/12 at 11:27 am to
Local weather doesn't really impact the river. Lots of rain upstream does and will.
Posted by JasonL79
Member since Jan 2010
6397 posts
Posted on 8/31/12 at 11:30 am to
To answer your inital question, the river did rise about 8-10ft during the storm according to some people I know that work on the river around New Orleans. It just went down quick after the storm.
Posted by Jim Rockford
Member since May 2011
98111 posts
Posted on 8/31/12 at 11:51 am to
Nothing below the mouth Red River flows into the Mississippi. All the rain that falls in S. La reaches the gulf through other routes. The storm surge caused water to flow backwards and raised the Mississippi about ten feet, but that's already flowed back out.
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