For folks trying to understand the history and changes of the Missouri River, you can't do much better than reading "Unruly River" by Robert Kelley Schneiders.
Right now Dr. Schneiders is in the Dakotas now and is travelling along reporting on the flood as it happens throughout the basin. You can follow his observations at: http://ecointheknow.com/news/ .
Here's one of his pieces published June 3, 2011 in the Omaha World-Herald, reprinted with the author's permission. As always, the opinion pieces reprinted on Big Muddy News reflect the opinions of the author alone. They are important for gaining perspective on a complex issue.
Midlands Voices: Rethink flood role of Corps
By Robert Kelley Schneiders, Ph.D.
The writer, of Boulder, Colo., has written two books on the history of the Missouri River, “Unruly River: Two Centuries of Change Along the Missouri” (University Press of Kansas, 1999) and “Big Sky Rivers: The Yellowstone and Upper Missouri” (University Press of Kansas, 2003). He is the co-founder and director of Eco InTheKnow, LLC, www.ecointheknow.com.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers recently announced that the entire Missouri Valley, from Montana through the state of Missouri, faces the threat of flooding in the next several weeks. According to the Corps, this flood threat is unprecedented in the history of the Missouri because of the amount of water now, or soon to be, descending from the river. But it is unprecedented for another reason.
Prior to the construction of the Corps’s big Missouri River dams, the Missouri flooded twice each year. It flooded every April when the snowpack lying atop the prairies and plains melted and then poured into the river. Old-timers referred to this first flood of the year as the April Rise or Spring Fresh. The Spring Fresh lasted from a few days to a few weeks. The most powerful and damaging April rises occurred in 1881, 1943 and 1952.
Following the passage of the Spring Rise, the Missouri often dropped to below flood stage in late April and May. However, the Missouri bounced back up again in June, when the river’s second annual flood took place. Valley residents knew this flood as the June Rise or Summer Rise.
The June Rise resulted from the melting of the Rocky Mountain snowpack in conjunction with the advent of heavy thunderstorms across both the upper and lower Missouri basin. The June Rise carried more water, covered a larger area and lasted for a longer period of time than the April Fresh.
With the June Rise, the Missouri earned its nickname “The Mighty Mo.” During the largest June rises, water stretched from valley wall to valley wall, from the Dakotas all the way south into the state of Missouri. The Missouri also increased its volume to 10 or 15 times its normal flow rate. One of the highest June rises on record struck the two Kansas Cities in June 1903.
The present high flows in the Missouri are consistent with the river’s past hydrological character. This year’s projected Missouri River flood is another large June Rise.
But the soon-to-arrive Great Missouri River Flood of 2011 is unique. Why? Because it is going to happen all along the Missouri Valley in spite of the presence of the Corps’ six main-stem dams.
The Corps built the Dakota dams to prevent floods. One of the key advocates for the construction of those dams was a politically savvy general named Lewis A. Pick, who headed the Corps’ Missouri River Division in the mid-1940s. The Army later promoted him to chief of engineers because he did such a brilliant job of ensuring the Army’s dominance over the apportionment of the Missouri’s waters.
In the 1940s and 1950s, Pick acquired congressional funding for the Dakota dams by promising an end to the Missouri’s two annual floods.
After the completion of the main-stem dams, the Corps publicly claimed that it had “tamed” the Mighty Mo. It also encouraged development of the river’s former floodplain in order to solidify its political alliances with society’s industrial, agricultural, financial and real estate elites.
Consequently, factories arose in the lowlands, McMansions appeared directly on the banks of the river, concrete roadways cut paths through old channel areas, and corn and soybeans flourished within feet of the river’s fast-moving waters.
Today, Missouri Valley residents confront a disaster of historic proportions. But rather than blame the coming flood on global warming (although it may be a factor), we would be better served by examining the Corps’s role along the river.
More specifically, how has the Corps’s navigation channel from Sioux City to the mouth, and the reservoir release sequence at the upstream dams, contributed to this flood and other damaging floods?
It is a proven fact that the confined and straightened navigation channel reduced the lower river’s carrying capacity and increased its channel velocity — both factors increase the probability of floods and their destructive effects. Additionally, a greater drawdown of the reservoirs in the fall and winter will open up more floodwater storage space in the spring and summer.
A reassessment and alteration of the role of the Army Corps of Engineers along the Missouri might prevent a similar disaster in the future.
The writer is scheduled to give a presentation in Sioux City, Iowa, at 2 p.m. on Sunday, June 26. Hosted by the Betty Strong Encounter Center, the presentation is titled, “The Last Great Deluge: Siouxland, the Missouri River and the Epic Flood of 1952.”
I Ordered "Uruly River" last weekend for $5 used on Amazon.
ReplyDeleteThanks,
Josh
"A reassessment and alteration of the role of the Army Corps of Engineers along the Missouri might prevent a similar disaster in the future."
ReplyDeleteDoes he elaborate anywhere on the above statement?
Robert Kelley Schneiders is publishing a rolling blog about this flood, and what it teaches us about the management of the Missouri River. However, I'm not sure how he would answer that question directly given the reality of the dams, except his statement above that the dams should be drawn down more in late fall and winter.
ReplyDeleteHe has a lot of interesting observations in his blog located here: http://ecointheknow.com/news/
I have purchased the book too. It's accessible and very informative, reminding readers that we who live along the Missouri share a vast and complicated eco-system. It's well worth reading. Order it on Amazon or AbeBooks used.
ReplyDeleteBill Beacom wrote: Prior to 1920 the biggest promoter of Navigation and dams on the Missouri river was not the state of Missouri, but South Dakota. They wanted the hydro-power and the Navigation because railroads had a monopoly and they were skinning the farmers on the freight rates, plus they wanted cheap electricity.. Peter Norbeck and Doane Robinson of South Dakota were talking about building dams and unsuccessfully tried to lobby Congress to build dams several years before Nichols succeeded. This guy sounds like just another Navigation basher to me. Surely he must know of the Missouri River Navigation Association and that all 10 states in the Basin were represented and supported Navigation in those same 1920's.There is no Navigation channel above Ponca, NE, yet homes below Yankton are flooded. I am also unfamiliar with any Navigation channel the Corps of engineers built below the Oahe dam,yet Pierre South Dakota is getting flooded. Likewise I am also unaware of any Corps Navigation channels below Garrison dam yet Bismarck North Dakota is also being flooded. The truth is there will be very little flooding in Missouri caused wholly by the 150,000cfs releases from Gavins Point dam. It will take a lot of rain along with it. I could go on but my point is made. Capt. Bill Beacom Sioux City, IA
ReplyDeleteCapt. Bill - I'm really glad you found our blog and commented. I hope you're personally doing OK up in Sioux City.
ReplyDeleteMy understanding is that without the dams, this flood would be much higher, bluff to bluff on a much larger reach of river. The dams knocked out the peaks of flows, but extended the duration and therefore the risk. The channelization and tight levees I think have more of an amplifying effect on less severe flood events than this one.
The reason so many people are affected immediately below the dams is because people have grown accustomed to the dams protecting them from floods. When a friend of mine in Pierre was asked about if he had flood insurance, he said the dam was his flood insurance. There are a lot of people who don't have flood insurance because they didn't think they lived in a flood zone.
Good point on the danger to lower reaches in Missouri. It's always more about rain down here, but especially this year.