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Iowa, Illinois and Missouri Flooding is Visible from Space


Levee Breaks and Overtoppings Flood Large Areas


Iowa and Missouri rainfall map
Rainfall map of the Midwestern United States showing cumulative rainfall between June 2 and June 12, 2008.

In early June, 2008 the United States Midwest was hit by a steady string of rainstorms.  The precipitation completely saturated the ground and produced record flooding in many parts of Iowa, Illinois, Missouri and other Midwestern states.  Flooding was severe enough to exceed 500-year levels in several areas.

The damage caused by the flooding was very high. At least 24 people were killed and nearly 200 injured. Billions of dollars worth of homes and businesses were destroyed. Flooding of spring crops caused billions of lost dollars for Midwest farmers.

Along these flooding rivers many levees were breached and many were overtopped.  Although the flooding result is the same in both of these situations they are different types of problems.  In the case of a breach an engineered structure failed but in the case of an overtopping the structure was successful but the flood waters exceeded its design height.  In both cases people who had homes, farms and businesses behind the levee thought that they were protected but suddenly they were not.

satellite image of Iowa, Illinois and Missouri flooding
A view of from space of the flooding and results of levee breaches along the Mississippi River in Iowa, Illinois and Missouri. The large blue "lakes" in the "after" image are areas behind levees that were overtopped or breached. The water was then trapped behind the levee and could not reenter the river. NASA image from EarthObservatory.

Hannibal Missouri flood gage
Hydrograph of Mississippi River at Hannibal, Missouri at 14 feet above flood stage on June 19th.
The graph at right is a stage hydrograph from a United States Geological Survey gaging station on the Mississippi River near Hannibal, Missouri. It shows the height of the Mississippi River in feet on the vertical axis and the date on the horizontal axis. Flood level is marked on the hydrograph as a red horizontal line at a gage height of about sixteen feet.

This hydrograph clearly shows the severity and duration of flooding in the Hannibal area. It shows that the Mississippi River reached flood level on the morning of June 4. The river then kept rising for over two full weeks. During that time it reached a gage height of almost thirty feet - a height of nearly fourteen feet above flood stage.

Although the cause of the flooding is different, this type of inundation is just as damaging as what was experienced by New Orleans as a result of Hurricane Katrina.

high resolution satellite image of levee breaks
NASA Satellite image of the Mississippi River showing flooded areas in Missouri, Iowa and Illinois. The large blue areas are flooded lands behind levee breaks and overtoppings. The Des Moines and Iowa Rivers can be seen joining the Mississippi from the west..

For more information see our Midwest Flood of 2008 page.

 

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