Author Topic: New Orleans is sinking  (Read 349 times)

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Offline IntrepidWizard

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New Orleans is sinking
« on: September 05, 2005, 11:18:00 AM »
NEW ORLEANS IS SINKING                   BY JIM  WILSON        Published
on:  September 11, 2001        
(http://www.popularmechanics.com/science/research/1282151.html#)  
(http://www.popularmechanics.com/science/research/1282151.html#)  (http://www.popularmechanics.com/science/research/1282151.html#)  
(http://www.popularmechanics.com/science/research/1282151.html#)          


          The surge of a Category 5 storm could  put New Orleans under 18 ft.
of water.      

They don't bury the dead in New Orleans. The highest point  in the city is
only 6 ft. above sea level, which makes for watery  graves. Fearful that rotting
corpses caused epidemics, the city  limited ground burials in 1830.
Mausoleums built on soggy cemetery  grounds became the final resting place for
generations. Beyond  providing a macabre tourist attraction, these "cities of the
dead"  serve as a reminder of the Big Easy's vulnerability to flooding. The  
reason water rushes into graves is because New Orleans sits atop a  delta made of
unconsolidated material that has washed down the  Mississippi River.
Think of the city as a chin jutting out, waiting for a one-two  punch from
Mother Nature. The first blow comes from the sky.  Hurricanes plying the Gulf of
Mexico push massive domes of water  (storm surges) ahead of their swirling
winds. After the surges hit,  the second blow strikes from below. The same
swampy delta ground  that necessitates above-ground burials leaves water from the
storm  surge with no place to go but up.
The fact that New Orleans has not already sunk is a matter of  luck. If
slightly different paths had been followed by Hurricanes  Camille, which struck in
August 1969, Andrew in August 1992 or  George in September 1998, today we
might need scuba gear to tour the  French Quarter.
"In New Orleans, you never get above sea level, so you're always  going to be
isolated during a strong hurricane," says Kay Wilkins of  the southeast
Louisiana chapter of the American Red Cross.
During a strong hurricane, the city could be inundated with water  blocking
all streets in and out for days, leaving people stranded  without electricity
and access to clean drinking water. Many also  could die because the city has
few buildings that could withstand  the sustained 96- to 100-mph winds and 6-
to 8-ft. storm surges of a  Category 2 hurricane. Moving to higher elevations
would be just as  dangerous as staying on low ground. Had Camille, a Category 5
storm,  made landfall at New Orleans, instead of losing her punch before  
arriving, her winds would have blown twice as hard and her storm  surge would
have been three times as high.
Yet knowing all this, area residents have made their potential  problem
worse. "Over the past 30 years, the coastal region impacted  by Camille has changed
dramatically. Coastal erosion combined with  soaring commercial and
residential development in Louisiana,  Mississippi and Alabama have all combined to
significantly increase  the vulnerability of the area," says Sandy Ward Eslinger,
of the  National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration's Coastal  
Services Center in Charleston, S.C.
Early Warning
Emergency planners believe that it is a  foregone conclusion that the Big
Easy someday will be hit by a  scouring storm surge. And, given the tremendous
amount of  coastal-area development, this watery "big one" will produce a  
staggering amount of damage. Yet, this doesn't necessarily mean that  there will be
a massive loss of lives.
The key is a new emergency warning system developed by Gregory  Stone, a
professor at Louisiana State University (LSU). It is called  WAVCIS, which stands
for wave-current surge information system.  Within 30 minutes to an hour after
raw data is collected from  monitoring stations in the Gulf, an assessment of
storm-surge damage  would be available to emergency planners. Disaster relief
agencies  then would be able to mobilize resources--rescue personnel, the Red
Cross, and so forth.
The $4.5 million WAVCIS project, which is now coming on line,  will fill a
major void in the Louisiana storm warning system, which  was practically
nonexistent compared to those of other Gulf Coast  states. A system of 20 "weather
buoys" along the U.S. coastline  serves as a warning system for the Gulf of
Mexico. However, the  buoys are not distributed evenly and Louisiana falls into
one of the  gaps. From the mouth of the Mississippi River to the Louisiana-Texas
border, there are no buoys. Only one buoy serves Louisiana, and it  is 62
miles east of the Mississippi River and more than 300 miles to  the south. So
it's a bit like predicting the weather in Boston when  your thermometer is in
Philadelphia. The other buoys are near the  coastlines of Texas, Mississippi,
Alabama and Florida, and several  hundred miles out into the Gulf.
Stable Platforms
One reason that WAVCIS will be more  accurate is that its sensors are
attached to offshore oil platforms.  The older, floating buoys ride up and down with
the waves and often  can't give accurate pictures of wave heights and storm
surges.  Stable platforms mean that the sensors can be placed above and below  
the water, allowing more precise measurements. Data from each of the  13
stations, five of which are now on line, is transmitted to LSU,  where it'll be
interpreted and sent to emergency planners centers,  via the Internet.
"With this new system [WAVCIS], we get to see real information on  storm
surge and we can feed that into our models and come up with  real data," says Mike
Brown, assistant director of the New Orleans  emergency management office.
Because large areas would have to be evacuated, false alarms  could be
harmful to the economy. Stone sees it as a reasonable  tradeoff.
"It's better to have that frustration than the loss of life. The  potential
loss of life in Louisiana could be catastrophic because  there is just nowhere
to  go."
Government is not reason; it is not eloquence; it is force! Like fire, it is
a dangerous servant and a fearful master. -- George Washington