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Flood discharges in the upper Mississippi River basin, 1993

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1993

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Abstract

During spring and summer 1993, record flooding inundated much of the upper Mississippi River Basin . The magnitude of the damages-in terms of property, disrupted business, and personal trauma-was unmatched by any other flood disaster in United States history . Property dam age alone is expected to exceed $10 billion . Damaged highways and submerged roads disrupted overland transportation throughout the flooded region . The Mississippi and the Missouri Rivers were closed to navigation before and after the flooding . Millions of acres of productive farmland remained under water for weeks during the growing season. Rills and gullies in many tilled fields are the result of the severe erosion that occurred throughout the Midwestern United States farmbelt. The hydrologic effects of extended rainfall throughout the upper Midwestern United States were severe and widespread. The banks and channels of many rivers were severely eroded, and sediment was deposited over large areas of the basin's flood plain . Record flows submerged many areas that had not been affected by previous floods. Industrial and agricultural areas were inundated, which caused concern about the transport and fate of industrial chemicals, sewage effluent, and agricultural chemicals in the floodwaters . The extent and duration of the flooding caused numerous levees to fail . One failed levee on the Raccoon River in Des Moines, Iowa, led to flooding of the city's water treatment plant. As a result, the city was without drinking water for 19 days.