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re: Morganza Spillway may or may not open for a 3rd time -- lack of clear info from ACoE

Posted on 2/22/19 at 2:01 pm to
Posted by Emteein
Baton Rouge
Member since Jun 2011
3886 posts
Posted on 2/22/19 at 2:01 pm to
quote:

It would greatly depend on the part of Baton Rouge.

If it broke at downtown, north Baton Rouge would have some issues but it’s still gonna flow towards the southern part.

If it broke more around gardere, all of that area and all of those neighborhoods on Nicholson and Burbank would be fricked




Basically on the east bank of the river the levee starts around north st. (not to be confused with North Blvd.). There really isnt a man made levee north of that, The natural bluff along the river in baton rouge starts to get further and further away from the river south of north st.
Posted by LSUBoo
Knoxville, TN
Member since Mar 2006
101919 posts
Posted on 2/22/19 at 2:02 pm to
quote:

If it broke at downtown, north Baton Rouge would have some issues but it’s still gonna flow towards the southern part.


If it broke downtown, then it would still primarily flow South along Nicholson, flood the lower portion of LSU including the PMAC and Tiger Stadium, and then keep on going toward Brightside and then eventually to Bayou Manchac -> Amite River -> Lake Maurepas.

North BR is generally higher ground.
Posted by Jim Rockford
Member since May 2011
98180 posts
Posted on 2/22/19 at 2:02 pm to
Use the loop to evacuate.
Posted by 777Tiger
Member since Mar 2011
73856 posts
Posted on 2/22/19 at 2:04 pm to
quote:

the quad would be safe,

you're right, the water would never go to the quad, too many better floods there before it, could never live up to them
This post was edited on 2/22/19 at 2:06 pm
Posted by Oilfieldbiology
Member since Nov 2016
37491 posts
Posted on 2/22/19 at 2:04 pm to
It will only hit gradere and north BR. Because weather events and natural disasters are racist
Posted by lostinbr
Baton Rouge, LA
Member since Oct 2017
9342 posts
Posted on 2/22/19 at 2:04 pm to
quote:

we wouldn't lose the ports in Baton Rouge and New Orleans, but would lose ALL DRINKING WATER FOR BOTH CITIES FOREVER !!!!!!!!!!!!

Uhh..
Posted by NYNolaguy1
Member since May 2011
20891 posts
Posted on 2/22/19 at 2:06 pm to
quote:

we wouldn't lose the ports in Baton Rouge


Not so fast my friend.

Water would only come up to sea level if the MS River got diverted. Thats a hell of a lot of dredging and digging to make up that difference at the BR port.

Also the petro chemical corridor would be totally fricked as they lose their fresh water intakes.
Posted by jimbeam
University of LSU
Member since Oct 2011
75703 posts
Posted on 2/22/19 at 2:07 pm to
Pain
This post was edited on 2/22/19 at 2:07 pm
Posted by TigerstuckinMS
Member since Nov 2005
33687 posts
Posted on 2/22/19 at 2:07 pm to
quote:

I'm genuinely curious what happens if the forecast crest of 43' in BR occurs (which we have every reason to believe it will and this is by no means record levels) and then a 4' section of levee washes away sometime over night due to the increased pressure on the levee at a time when it's saturated from heavy rain since November. Where would all that water spread out to? It would eventually (within a couple days I'm sure) flow into the Comite and Amite Rivers, flooding Livingston, Ascension and St. James parishes pretty badly as well.

Just to put it into perspective: The 2016 flood was caused by about 7.1 trillion gallons of water dropped in 3 days.

The Mississippi River flows about 700,000 cubic feet per second at max, which is about 5.25 million gallons per second. At that rate, it would take 1,350,000 seconds to put the same amount of water heading toward the Amite and Comite. That would take 15.5 days to equal the same amount of water, and that's if the Mississippi goes completely dry downstream of BR because it's busy monkeyfricking us.

The short answer is I have no fricking clue.
Posted by LSUBoo
Knoxville, TN
Member since Mar 2006
101919 posts
Posted on 2/22/19 at 2:08 pm to
They'd figure out some way to divert enough water to the Mississippi River's current channel to keep it navigable.
Posted by TDsngumbo
Alpha Silverfox
Member since Oct 2011
41578 posts
Posted on 2/22/19 at 2:14 pm to
quote:

Just to put it into perspective: The 2016 flood was caused by about 7.1 trillion gallons of water dropped in 3 days.


quote:

That would take 15.5 days to equal the same amount of water, and that's if the Mississippi goes completely dry downstream of BR because it's busy monkeyfricking us.

That 7.1 trillion gallons of water dropped in 3 days in 2016 was across an area from Hammond to Lafayette southward to Houma. That's not 7.1 trillion gallons of water all going through the Amite and Comite during the 2016 flood. If the Mississippi levee breaks in the BR area, you'd see 2.2 trillion gallons of water flowing only through EBR, Livingston, and Ascension parishes after 5 days. Theoretically it would take much longer than 5 days to plug up the levee.
Posted by crazyLSUstudent
391 miles away from Tiger Stadium
Member since Mar 2012
5515 posts
Posted on 2/22/19 at 2:15 pm to
Everything west of highland rd and south of LSU would be fricked
Posted by crazyLSUstudent
391 miles away from Tiger Stadium
Member since Mar 2012
5515 posts
Posted on 2/22/19 at 2:24 pm to
Negatory Mississippi hit 1.5 million cfs in 2011. Its over 1 million cfs rn
Posted by BlackAdam
Member since Jan 2016
6450 posts
Posted on 2/22/19 at 2:26 pm to
quote:

Anyone here with actual real knowledge of this type of scenario? What would that look like?


I don't know, but i I have a feeling property values in the neighborhoods east of highland road would increase quite a bit.
Posted by Swamproot
Member since Oct 2017
339 posts
Posted on 2/22/19 at 2:28 pm to
Probably do about one billion dollars in improvements
Posted by Nado Jenkins83
Land of the Free
Member since Nov 2012
59623 posts
Posted on 2/22/19 at 2:28 pm to
I just had a smoothie and it feels like I'm gonna shite myself
Posted by Ed Osteen
Member since Oct 2007
57475 posts
Posted on 2/22/19 at 2:29 pm to
highland road is the natural levee that ends the flood plain so up that area where the elevation changes
Posted by LSUGRAD2008
Baton Rouge
Member since Mar 2018
479 posts
Posted on 2/22/19 at 2:34 pm to
I know we wouldn't have that new downtown library anymore
Posted by MorbidTheClown
Baton Rouge
Member since Jan 2015
65881 posts
Posted on 2/22/19 at 2:36 pm to
Posted by FelicianaTigerfan
Comanche County
Member since Aug 2009
26059 posts
Posted on 2/22/19 at 2:39 pm to
quote:

4' section


would erode to a 100 yard section within minutes
This post was edited on 2/22/19 at 2:48 pm
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