Wednesday, March 17, 2010
Tuesday, March 9, 2010
Less Mighty Mississippi
Monday, March 1, 2010
Sketches

This drawing contrasts the the solidity of the Cheniere to the large amount of saturation in the land near the fresh water cuts

The Mississippi river is a key instrument in the city's successes


These two drawings represent the saturation of land near the Gulf and near the multiple cuts leading from the fresh water towards the Gulf. Near the cuts the land closest to the water seemed to be imaginary, it had the appearance of land but in actuality, it was mostly water
Sketches
Comparison of wind's effect on tarp and tree branch.






View of spud bargesThe Control of Nature
St. Bernard parish
"Slaves with wheelbarrows started the levees. Immigrants with wheelbarrows replaced the slaves. Mule-drawn scrapers replaced the wheelbarrows."
Eads plan for the Mississippi: "parallel jetties in the river's mouth. They pinched the currents. The accelerated water dug out and maintained a navigable channel."

Nomadic vs. permanent- "pre-Aswan Nile... lived on high ground, farmed low ground, and permitted floods to come and go according to the rhythms of nature" vs. "you can't move Vicksburg"
"In southern Louisiana, the bed of the Mississippi River is so far below sea level that a flow of at least a hundred and twenty thousand cubic feet per second is needed to hold back salt water and keep it below New Orleans, which drinks the river."
Water on Mississippi River side of the Old river dam= 18 feet, and Atchafalya side=5 feet
Old River Control
Plan, section, cross section of levee system of Mississippi river.
The river always chooses the shortest/easiest route (steepest gradient) or the path of least resistance.- East (Teche)
- Lafourche
- Plaquemines
- Atchafalya (before this could happen, the army corps got involved)
Louisiana= sand and silt from previous river flows (about 200 miles wide)


Rising Tide
"They took a certain pride in its awfulness, in the greatness of the river. Confronting it made them larger." (pg. 17)
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