The Great Flood of 1993 was a major flood that occurred in the American Midwest, along the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers, and their tributaries, from April to October of 1993. The flood was among the most costly, and devastating to have occurred in the United States, with $15 billion in damages. It was the worst such U.S. disaster since the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927, as measured by duration, square miles inundated, persons displaced, crop and property damage, and number of record river levels. In some categories, it surpassed even the 1927 flood.
Storms, persistent and repetitive in nature during the late spring and summer, bombarded the Upper Midwest with voluminous rainfall amounts. Portions of east-central Iowa received as much as 48 inches of rain, between April 1 and August 31, 1993, and many areas across the central-northern plains had 200-350 percent above normal precipitation. In the St. Louis National Weather Service (NWS) forecast area encompassing eastern Missouri and southwest Illinois, 36 forecast points rose above flood stage, and 20 river stage records were broken. The 1993 flood broke record river levels set during the 1973 Mississippi and the 1951 Missouri River floods.
From July 11 until July 22 the Des Moines, Iowa Water Works treatment facility was flooded by the Raccoon River. This resulted in the plant being powered down and no running water for that period. During this time the Army National Guard and American Red Cross set up water stations, and the local Anheuser-Busch bottler distributed water in white 6-packs with their logo on it. Once running water was restored there was enough pressure to bathe and flush toilets, but the water was not certified potable until July 29. The final usage restrictions were lifted in August.
The Mississippi River stalled a few days at the April 1973 record stages, seemingly waiting for the Missouri River to arrive, before pushing levels upwards again, breaking levees, driving people and their possessions to higher ground and causing havoc with anything in its path.
The crests, now combined as one, moved downstream through St. Louis and Chester on its way to the confluence with the Ohio River at Cairo, Illinois. Only minor flooding occurred below the Ohio due to the drought the eastern U.S. was facing the same time; if the Ohio River watershed had not been in drought conditions, the 1993 flood could have rivaled the 1927 flood in overall damage on the lower Mississippi.
Major sandbagging activities were underway on the lower Missouri River, the River des Peres in St. Louis, the Mississippi River south of St. Louis and on many other tributaries across Missouri and Illinois. Some of these efforts were successful while others were not as the river continued to spawn destruction.
Over 1,000 flood warnings and statements, five times the normal, were issued to notify the public and need-to-know officials of river levels. In places like St. Louis, river levels were nearly 20 feet (6 m) above flood stage and had never been this high in its 150 year history. The 52 foot (16 m) St. Louis Floodwall, built to handle the volume of the 1844 flood, was able to keep the 1993 flood out with just over two feet to spare.
On the Missouri River it was estimated that nearly all of the 700 privately built agricultural levees were overtopped or destroyed. Navigation on the Mississippi and Missouri River had been closed since early July resulting in a loss of $2 million (1993) per day in commerce.
The Mississippi River at St. Louis crested at 49.6 feet (15.1 m) on August 1, nearly 20 feet (6 m) above flood stage and had a peak flow rate of 1,080,000 ft³/s (30,600 m³/s). At this rate, a bowl the size of Busch Stadium would be filled to the brim in 69 seconds.
Historic weather events in the United States | Natural history of Illinois | Natural history of Iowa | Natural history of Missouri | Natural history of North Dakota | Natural history of South Dakota | Natural history of Nebraska | Natural history of Kansas | Natural history of Minnesota | Natural history of Wisconsin | Mississippi River | Missouri River
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Great Flood of 1993".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world