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Flood Control

When
it rains or snows, some of the water is retained by the soil, some is absorbed
by vegetation, some evaporates, and the remainder, which reaches stream
channels, is called runoff.
flood
occur
when soil and vegetation cannot absorb all the water; water then runs off the
land in quantities that cannot be carried in stream channels or retained in
natural ponds and constructed reservoirs (dam) About 30 percent of all
precipitation is runoff, and this amount may be increased by melting snow
masses. Periodic floods occur naturally on many rivers, forming an area known as
the flood plain. These river floods often result from heavy rain, sometimes
combined with melting snow, which causes the rivers to overflow their banks; a
flood that rises and falls rapidly with little or no advance warning is called a
flash flood. Flash floods usually result from intense rainfall over a relatively
small area. Coastal areas are occasionally flooded by unusually high tides
induced by severe winds over ocean surfaces, or by tsunamis caused by undersea
earthquakes

III.
Effects of Floods
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Floods
not only damage property and endanger the lives of humans and animals, but have
other effects as well. Rapid runoff causes soil erosion as well as sediment
deposition problems downstream. Spawning grounds for fish and other wildlife
habitat are often destroyed. High-velocity currents increase flood damage;
prolonged high floods delay traffic and interfere with drainage and economic use
of lands. Bridge abutments, bank lines, sewer outfalls, and other structures
within floodways are damaged, and navigation and hydroelectric power are often
impaired. Financial losses due to floods are commonly millions of dollars each
year.

IV.
Control of Floods
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The
basic methods of flood control have been practiced since ancient times. These
methods include reforestation and the construction of levees, dams, reservoirs,
and floodways (artificial channels that divert floodwater).
The
ancient Chinese built levees to raise the banks of the Huang He (Yellow River)
on the supposition that the confined river would then deepen its channel to
contain the maximum flow. The result, however, was a raising of the riverbed,
because the sedimentary deposit of alluvial soil previously distributed over the
entire flood plain during annual flooding was confined to the river bottom. In
4000 years the level of the river rose as high as 21 m (70 ft) above the
surrounding plain. In 1887 one of the worst floods in recorded history occurred
when the Huang He broke through the levees, killing more than a million people.
Levees were constructed during the Middle Ages on the po,danube,rhine,rhone
, and
volga rivers and have been supplemented in modern times by reforestation
and by storage reservoirs. Levees are still in extensive use, notably on the
mississippi , where the river has been confined to a narrow channel to provide
the depth necessary for navigation. Maintaining that depth has required repeated
dredging of the channel, adding to the already large cost of sustaining the
levee system.
Floods
in the Mississippi
Valley have
demonstrated that levees alone do not provide sufficient protection against
flooding on a large river, and other methods of flood control, including dams
and floodways, are now in use on the Mississippi River . However, flood-control
measures failed to contain the great flood of the summer of 1993, one of the
worst in United States history. Swelled by record spring rains, the Mississippi
and missouri
rivers and many of their tributaries overflowed their banks, inundating an
estimated 8 million acres by early August. The raging floodwaters also inflicted
major damage on levees, dams, and floodways, ruined an additional 12 million
acres of cropland, and caused over $10 billion in damage. At its height, the
Missouri river crested almost 15 m (almost 50 ft) above its banks; south of
Illinois and Missouri, where the riverbed is very wide and lined with levees,
there was only minor damage.
Although
dams have been used for many centuries, their primary purposes were to build up
water reservoirs for irrigation and other domestic uses and to create power.
Only recently have they been constructed specifically for flood control. An
effective method of controlling floodwaters is to construct coordinated groups
of dams and reservoirs on the headwaters of the streams that lead into the main
rivers, so that water can be stored during periods of heavy runoff and released
gradually during dry seasons Thehoover dam on the colorado River, the
reservoirs in the Miami Conservancy District, and dams of the tennesse valley
authority (TVA) have demonstrated the value of this method. When the
tributaries on which these dams are located are at their normal level, the dams
operate solely to produce power and provide water for various purposes. During
time of high water the dams operate to slow down the flow. The dams closest to
the origins of the tributaries restrain the floodwaters while the dams farther
down slowly release their normal reservoirs and are drained. Then the
floodwaters are released to each succeeding dam and are finally emptied into the
main river, the capacity of which has been increased by straightening and
deepening.
In
other countries, one remarkable flood-control project is the Delta Plan, a
Netherlands effort begun in 1958 and completed in 1985. The project consists of
a series of giant dams that link islands in the deltas of the Rhine, Maas, and
Schelde (Escaut) rivers. A huge storm-surge barrier 9 km (5.6 mi) long is
lowered only when a sea flood is anticipated; at other times, tides move freely
through the passage. Another such project, on a somewhat smaller scale, was
completed across the Thames River a short distance below London in 1983.
Through
the centuries people have created a flood problem by cutting down trees and
digging up the vegetable cover of the soil, thus increasing soil erosion.
Cultivation decreases the ability of the soil to retain water and increases
runoff. Vast land areas along the headwaters of rivers throughout the world have
been laid waste by intensive cultivation and subsequent erosion. Flood control
in these areas has been directed to restoring vegetation and instituting
efficient methods of soil management such as crop rotation and contour
plowing.
Another
method of flood control is the construction of floodways on the lower reaches of
rivers to divert floodwaters. The rivers are widened at certain points and
allowed to overflow. Inundation of certain confined areas prevents the flooding
of other areas. The Egyptians have used regulated flooding for thousands of
years. Many areas in the Nile Valley depend for their continued fertility on
periodic flooding because the soil deposited by sedimentation from floodwater is
very rich.

V.
Flood-Control Legislation
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In
the 20th century the problem of flood control in the United States has assumed
national importance because of the increasing frequency and intensity of floods
in all of the great river valleys as a result of deforestation. In addition,
agricultural and industrial development in these valleys has necessitated a
coordinated program of flood control. Federal legislation has been passed to aid
the states in effecting adequate control measures.
Federal
action in this field was long hampered by many constitutional limitations. As
late as 1879 the problem of Mississippi River flood control was left to the 31
states in that river's drainage system. In that year, the federal government,
under the guise of improving navigation (a power constitutionally granted to
it), helped finance the construction of levees. The federal government has
played an increasingly important role in the problem of flood control.
When
scientific research into the causes of floods showed that the construction of
levees was insufficient as a method of control, the first steps were made to
provide for reforestation and soil conservation. The Clarke-McNary Act of 1924,
the Mississippi Flood Control Act of 1928, and the McSweeney-McNary Act of 1928
were all directed toward that end. In 1935 the Soil Conservation Service was
established by the Congress of the United States under an act declaring a policy
of permanent provision for control and prevention of soil erosion, and for
control of floods. In the same year the Fulmer Act was passed, authorizing the
secretary of agriculture to enter into cooperative agreements with the states
for better forest land management. In 1937 further authority was granted to the
secretary of agriculture in the Bankhead-Jones Farm Tenant Act to control soil
erosion and to mitigate floods. Another act of Congress provided for an
investigation of the material resources in the California watersheds. Similar
acts covered the watersheds of the reogrande and the Pecos River. The
period of the 1930s is notable for the many national forests that were
established to assist in the soil-conservation program. The most important
single act directed at the problem of flood control was the establishment of the
TVA in 1933.
By
1940 the Supreme Court of the United States had passed on the constitutionality
of almost all federal activities in the field of flood control and had upheld
actions that related to almost all waters of the United States, without limiting
these actions to the navigable streams, as had been done earlier. In the Flood
Control Act of 1946, Congress authorized construction of 123 projects to aid
river regulation, flood control, and power development.
In
1972 Congress moved to reduce the hazards from the 28,000 nonfederal dams in the
country by passing a bill providing for a dam-inspection program. The action was
spurred by two disastrous dam failures during the year. At Buffalo Creek, West
Virginia, a makeshift dam at a coal mine site collapsed with a loss of more than
100 lives; and at Rapid City, South Dakota, two earthen dams gave way, resulting
in more than 200 deaths.
Many
aspects of flood control can be handled by individual states or groups of states
acting on a regional basis. One such project, completed in 1922, is the Miami
Conservancy District, a system of reservoirs in the Miami River valley in Ohio
that works to reduce flood hazards. Such organizations as the Los Angeles County
Flood Control District, the TVA, and others relating to specific areas have made
important studies of hydrologic and meteorological conditions to aid in the
forecasting of flood dangers and to plan flood control.


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