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Profile of Miss River at Algiers Point
Profile of Miss River at Algiers Point
At New Orleans the Mississippi River is a fascinating monster. New Orleans is 94 miles from the Head of Passes where the rivers splits into Southwest Pass, South Pass, and Pass à Loutre to enter the Gulf. The navigation channel from the Gulf past New Orleans and all the way to Baton Rouge is maintained at a minimum depth of  45 feet year round.

The river is less than 1 km wide at New Orleans and about 200 feet deep off Algiers Point. The water level ranges from 2 feet to 18 feet above sea level (NGVD) with the spring flood stage being the highest level. Flow averages 600 thousand cubic feet of water per second (100k-1m normal range).  Typically velocity is around 4-5 mph at the surface reaching almost 9 mph in flood stage. Project Flood at New Orleans with all diversions open is 1.5 million cfs.

(Just for fun - 600,000 cfs is about 5 million gallons per second. This flow would fill an Olympic swimming  pool in 0.04 seconds.)

Since the bottom of the river is deeper than the surface level of the Gulf, and saltwater is heavier than fresh water, saltwater from the Gulf can penetrate up river when the current is slow. Unchecked the saltwater wedge could reach as far as Natchez so engineers build a ridge across the river bottom near Myrtle Grove (64 miles from the Head of Passes) to stop the saltwater when river flow drops below a minimum target level.

Here's the story on August 15, 2012. With record drought savaging the crops in the Midwest, New Orleans begins to feel the effects:

map-saltwedge-081412.jpg 

It takes 90 days for a drop of water to move 2320 miles from Lake Itasca to the Gulf at an average speed of 1.07 mph.

Just before Katrina blew though in August 2005 the river was at low stage, just 2 feet above sea level. The storm caused the river level to rise to 16 feet overnight. Debris was blown over the top of the levee on north facing sections of the Westbank directly across from the Chalmette Battlefield. 100+ mph winds from the North pushed the waters towards the Westbank. Ships moored in the river strained at their anchors. A barge was thrown onto the batture and nearly struck the levee. Wave action threatened to top the levee.  In some places the debris line actually reached the top of the levee indicating some splash over.  A crevasse in that levee would have flooded Algiers and most of West Jefferson more violently than anything that happened in the lower Ninth Ward. Those levees are not armored, but are long established and well sodded with grass.

Rita caused a smaller spike in river level about a month later topping out under 8 feet.




  • Mississippi River Basin : :: Continue reading...
  • Project Flood : :: Continue reading...

  • Doing the math:

    Low flow (batture high and dry)
    2000 feet wide
    37 feet deep (average with Carrollton gauge, NORL1, reading 3 feet)
    6.5 feet per sec (4.5 mph)
    380,000 cubic feet per second

    Average Flow (batture mostly dry, wakes wash onto the batture)
    2000 feet wide
    43 feet deep (average with Carrollton gauge, NORL1, at 9 feet)
    7.5 feet per sec (5.1 mph)
    645,000 cubic feet per second

    Flood Stage (spillway openings above this level, water more than half way up the levee)
    2000 feet wide
    50 feet deep (gauge 17 feet)
    12 feet per second (8.2 mph)
    1,250,0000 cubic feet per second

    Project flood stage (water nearing the top of the lowest levees)
    2000 feet wide
    54 feet deep (gauge 21 feet)
    14 feet per second (9.5 mph)
    1,500,0000 cubic feet per second


    Intercoastal Waterway Mississippi River Gulf Outlet - MRGO


    Created : 3/29/2006 9:05:51 PM Updated: 8/15/2012 2:14:32 PM

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