A history of flood control in the United States shows an undying affair with levees. This love affair, however, was put severely to the test by the record flooding in the summer of 1993. About 70 percent of levees in the upper Midwest failed during this time, leading to extensive damage to both farmland and urban areas. Consequently, there were repeated calls to re-assess the nation\u27s floodplain management policies. The report of the Intera-gency Floodplain Management Review Committee is one outcome of this and it forms the basis of this commentary on levees. In many respects, levees are effective flood control measures, being relatively cheap to implement and easy to build. At the same time, levees have negative impacts, affecting the h...
Clinton Administration commissioned a review of floodplain management in the United States, with an ...
In the wake of Hurricane Katrina, the nation pondered how a relatively weak Category 3 storm could h...
Abstract: Evidence is presented to show that there is a growing disparity between public percep-tion...
A history of flood control in the United States shows an undying affair with levees. This love affai...
The use of levees for flood control has a long history in the United States in part because their re...
Many nations rely on dykes and levees to mitigate flood risk. However, a myriad of problems has prom...
Recent Australian floods have resulted in many changes to levee provisions in Queensland, Victoria a...
In 1968, the United States Army Corps of Engineers finished constructing the seventy-six-mile Missis...
Throughout history, man has utilized rivers for water supply, transportation, power generation, and ...
Human societies have learnt to cope with flood risks in several ways, the most prominent ways being ...
Notwithstanding a natural disaster of unprecedented severity in the heart of the country, and at a t...
Levees exist all over the United States, which protect land and property from devastating floods. Ma...
This paper assesses the market value of protection afforded by levees, using data from two metropoli...
[Departement_IRSTEA]Eaux [TR1_IRSTEA]GEUSIInternational audienceSince the 1990s, a majority of flood...
This is the publisher’s final pdf. The article is copyrighted by the American Geophysical Union and ...
Clinton Administration commissioned a review of floodplain management in the United States, with an ...
In the wake of Hurricane Katrina, the nation pondered how a relatively weak Category 3 storm could h...
Abstract: Evidence is presented to show that there is a growing disparity between public percep-tion...
A history of flood control in the United States shows an undying affair with levees. This love affai...
The use of levees for flood control has a long history in the United States in part because their re...
Many nations rely on dykes and levees to mitigate flood risk. However, a myriad of problems has prom...
Recent Australian floods have resulted in many changes to levee provisions in Queensland, Victoria a...
In 1968, the United States Army Corps of Engineers finished constructing the seventy-six-mile Missis...
Throughout history, man has utilized rivers for water supply, transportation, power generation, and ...
Human societies have learnt to cope with flood risks in several ways, the most prominent ways being ...
Notwithstanding a natural disaster of unprecedented severity in the heart of the country, and at a t...
Levees exist all over the United States, which protect land and property from devastating floods. Ma...
This paper assesses the market value of protection afforded by levees, using data from two metropoli...
[Departement_IRSTEA]Eaux [TR1_IRSTEA]GEUSIInternational audienceSince the 1990s, a majority of flood...
This is the publisher’s final pdf. The article is copyrighted by the American Geophysical Union and ...
Clinton Administration commissioned a review of floodplain management in the United States, with an ...
In the wake of Hurricane Katrina, the nation pondered how a relatively weak Category 3 storm could h...
Abstract: Evidence is presented to show that there is a growing disparity between public percep-tion...