California
to dam Delta sloughs if drought persists
"The
temporary dams would consist of rock barriers piled across the
entrance to three Delta channels: Sutter Slough and Steamboat Slough,
branching off the Sacramento River near Courtland; and False River,
branching off the San Joaquin River near Oakley.
In
the case of the first two sloughs, DWR project manager Mark Holderman
said the goal is to make the most of limited freshwater outflows that
might be available in the main stem of the Sacramento River. The
barriers would allow that fresh water to be held in the river, rather
than branching into the side channels. This would concentrate its
force and better hold back sediment that naturally would creep in
from San Francisco Bay as river flows dwindle because of the
drought."
Andy,
commenting on Robertscribbler's blog, notes:
"For
those folks who post here, from California, do you remember some of
the events of the 97 El Nino? Specifically the Sacramento River. It
almost topped the levies. Tons of houses and farms were in grave
danger.
For
those who don’t know the area, farms + housing are under the river
level. River is held back by very old levies. The land has receded,
river has silted. Now the river is higher.
Now
we go to today. They are putting that “semi dam” in place to keep
the salt water from running up the delta due to the depleted river
discharge.
Now
add an El Nino, perhaps a 97/98 repeat. I suspect that would not turn
out well."
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.