A careful program of subsurface sampling and cone penetration test soundings was employed to characterize the geologic conditions beneath the failed portion of the 17th Street Canal levee in New Orleans, where a 150 m long section of the levee and floodwall translated up to ~16 m when flood waters rose to 1-2 m of the wall\u27s crest on August 29, 2005, during Hurricane Katrina. The subsurface conditions are characterized by discrete layers of fill placed upon the historic cypress swamp, which is underlain by a deeper, prehistoric cypress swamp. These swamp deposits were consolidated beneath the levee, and in the area of the 2005 failure, the swamp materials infilled a natural depression believed to be an old slough, which dipped below the ...
Levee failures during Hurricane Katrina left 85% of New Orleans flooded, 1,500 dead, and about 400,0...
Hurricane Katrina was responsible for hundreds of deaths, billions of dollars of damage, and left th...
The failure of the New Orleans regional flood protection systems, and the resultant catastrophic flo...
The failure of the levee and floodwall section on the east bank of the 17th Street drainage canal wa...
A peat levee at Wilnis in The Netherlands suddenly failed at the end of the relatively dry summer of...
The two failures of the London Avenue Canal floodwalls contributed largely to the flooding of centra...
A peat levee at Wilnis in The Netherlands suddenly failed at the end of the relatively dry summer of...
Three widely studied seepage related failures in New Orleans levees during Hurricane Katrina are rea...
Hurricane Katrina made its final landfall on August 29, 2005, as a category three storm, at the mout...
The two failures of the London Avenue Canal floodwalls contributed largely to the flooding of centra...
During Hurricane Katrina, overtopping water caused erosion and subsequent failure of some I-type flo...
The failure of the New Orleans regional flood protection systems, and the resultant catastrophic flo...
The system of flood protection surrounding New Orleans and its adjoining parishes prior to Hurricane...
Flooding is a major threat to New Orleans due to its geographic location and geologic condition. How...
Hurricane Katrina resulted in the single most catastrophic failure of a civil engineered system in t...
Levee failures during Hurricane Katrina left 85% of New Orleans flooded, 1,500 dead, and about 400,0...
Hurricane Katrina was responsible for hundreds of deaths, billions of dollars of damage, and left th...
The failure of the New Orleans regional flood protection systems, and the resultant catastrophic flo...
The failure of the levee and floodwall section on the east bank of the 17th Street drainage canal wa...
A peat levee at Wilnis in The Netherlands suddenly failed at the end of the relatively dry summer of...
The two failures of the London Avenue Canal floodwalls contributed largely to the flooding of centra...
A peat levee at Wilnis in The Netherlands suddenly failed at the end of the relatively dry summer of...
Three widely studied seepage related failures in New Orleans levees during Hurricane Katrina are rea...
Hurricane Katrina made its final landfall on August 29, 2005, as a category three storm, at the mout...
The two failures of the London Avenue Canal floodwalls contributed largely to the flooding of centra...
During Hurricane Katrina, overtopping water caused erosion and subsequent failure of some I-type flo...
The failure of the New Orleans regional flood protection systems, and the resultant catastrophic flo...
The system of flood protection surrounding New Orleans and its adjoining parishes prior to Hurricane...
Flooding is a major threat to New Orleans due to its geographic location and geologic condition. How...
Hurricane Katrina resulted in the single most catastrophic failure of a civil engineered system in t...
Levee failures during Hurricane Katrina left 85% of New Orleans flooded, 1,500 dead, and about 400,0...
Hurricane Katrina was responsible for hundreds of deaths, billions of dollars of damage, and left th...
The failure of the New Orleans regional flood protection systems, and the resultant catastrophic flo...