Perilous
Times and Climate Change
Historic Flooding Unfolding Along Mississippi, Ohio Rivers
By Alex Sosnowski, Expert Senior Meteorologist
Apr 28, 2011; 12:58 PM ET
Flood waters from the Ohio River crash against a step of a home
along the river in Utica, Ind., Monday, April 25, 2011. (AP
Photo/Darron Cummings)
As if tornadoes and damaging thunderstorms were not enough,
historic flooding is also threatening the Mississippi River, below
St. Louis, as well as the lower part of the Ohio River.
The rising waters are expected to top levels set during February
1937. This mark is the middle Mississippi Valley's equivalent to
the 1993 event farther north along Old Man River.
Even if rain were to fall at a normal rate for the remainder of
the spring, the consequences of what has already happened in the
Midwest will affect way of life, property, agriculture and
travel/shipping/navigation for weeks in the region.
While the amount of evacuees currently numbers in the hundreds, it
could soon number in the tens of thousands as levees are topped or
breached and rivers expand their girth into more farming
communities, towns and cities.
The flooding problem is not only for the major rivers in the long
term, but flooding could repeat later this season for the smaller
rivers feeding into the Mississippi and Ohio rivers as well as the
multitude of small streams that feed into the rivers.
The Black River flooded areas around Poplar Bluff, Mo., while
rising waters along a stream overtook the town of Johnson, Ark.,
early this week.
A several-day stretch of rain-free weather is forecast by
AccuWeather.com meteorologists to continue into the first part of
the weekend. However, more rain and perhaps severe thunderstorms
may return by early next week.
River levels at Cairo, Ill., Tiptonville, Tenn., and several other
locations are forecast by National Weather Service hydrologists to
set new record highs this weekend.
Cairo, Ill., lies along the banks of where the Mississippi and
Ohio rivers meet.
The small colored squares on this map indicate river and stream
levels at gauge locations. Purple indicates major flooding, red
indicates moderate flooding, orange is indicative of minor
flooding and yellow suggests levels near flood stage.
A general 6 to 12 inches of rain have fallen on portions of
southeastern Missouri, southern Illinois, western Kentucky,
Arkansas, Indiana, Ohio and western Tennessee this month. However,
there have been much higher amounts locally.
Cape Girardeau, Mo., has received over 19 inches of rain so far
this month, which is over five times that of normal for the entire
month of April. 14.50 inches of rain have fallen in five days in
the city along the Mississippi River.
Cincinnati, Ohio has received over a foot of rain, which around
four times its normal rainfall for the entire month.
Record- or near-record water levels are taxing levees in the
region.
The stress on the levees in some locations will not only last days
but weeks as the huge rivers such as the Mississippi and Ohio take
much longer to fall below flood stage than smaller rivers.
The Army Corps of Engineers was preparing to breach the levee at
Birds Point, Mo., in order to possibly prevent a levee breach at
Cairo, Ill. It is believed this may take some of the pressure off
the levee protecting the city.
The planned breach has prompted a court battle between the Corps
and the Missouri attorney general Thursday.
Although not forecast to reach record levels, there are other
stretches of the Mississippi River farther north and south, and a
large part of the Ohio River farther to the east that have been
and will continue to remain well above flood stage.
The high water and saturated ground will delay the planting of
crops.
Fortunately, the growing season in this region is long and
evaporation rates will continue to increase into the first part of
the summer.
The region and the souls that work the land are notorious for
bouncing back after spring flooding, provided conditions turn
favorable in the month or two ahead.
What's Ahead?
The additional rainfall today in southern and eastern areas will
raise stream levels in these areas and may add to already high
levels of rivers.
While a break of dry weather is coming later in the week into the
weekend, the atmosphere is probably not yet done dishing out heavy
rainfall (and severe thunderstorms) for the region.
As a pocket of chilly air develops in the Northeast during the
first part of May, the battle zone may still lie over the Midwest,
where the warm, moist air continues to charge in from the South
and rise violently, forming the relentless downpours and big
storms.
While the rainfall forecast during May will probably not sustain
the flood levels at present or soon to be experienced, it could
continue to produce well above average stream flows and river
levels above flood stage through much of the balance of the
spring.
In addition the weather pattern will favor, at the very least,
episodes of flash and small stream flooding on a local basis in
the region through much of May.
With the shift in the cool pocket and further confrontations with
warmth and chill, there may be an increase in risk of storms with
severe weather and flooding farther north over the Midwest, than
what we have seen so far this spring.
The surge of high water will also continue to work downstream in
the weeks ahead, reaching areas from Memphis to New Orleans.