Unruly River

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This text takes a long historical view to reconstruct the Missouri Valley environment before Euro-American settlement and then trace the environmental transformations resulting from the development projects of the 19th and 20th centuries.

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Genre : Nature
Author : Robert Kelley Schneiders
Publisher :
Release : 1999
File : 336 Pages
ISBN-13 : UOM:39015043114985


Unruly Waters

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Running more than 1,200 miles from headwaters in eastern New Mexico through the middle of Texas to the Gulf of Mexico, the Brazos River has frustrated developers for nearly two centuries. This environmental history of the Brazos traces the techniques that engineers and politicians have repeatedly used to try to manage its flow. The vast majority of projects proposed or constructed in this watershed were failures, undone by the geology of the river as much as the cost of improvement. When developers erected locks, the river changed course. When they built large-scale dams, floodwaters overflowed the concrete rims. When they constructed levees, the soils collapsed. Yet lawmakers and laypeople, boosters and engineers continued to work toward improving the river and harnessing it for various uses. Through the plight of the Brazos River Archer illuminates the broader commentary on the efforts to tame this nation’s rivers as well as its historical perspectives on development and technology. The struggle to overcome nature, Archer notes, reflects a quintessentially American faith in technology.

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Genre : History
Author : Kenna Lang Archer
Publisher : UNM Press
Release : 2015-05-01
File : 290 Pages
ISBN-13 : 9780826355881


Holding Back The River

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A revelatory work of reporting on the men and women wrestling to harness and preserve America’s most vital natural resource: our rivers. The Mississippi. The Missouri. The Ohio. America’s rivers are the very lifeblood of our country. We need them for nourishing crops, for cheap bulk transportation, for hydroelectric power, for fresh drinking water. Rivers are also part of our mythology, our collective soul; they are Mark Twain, Led Zeppelin, and the Delta Blues. But as infrastructure across the nation fails and climate change pushes rivers and seas to new heights, we’ve arrived at a critical moment in our battle to tame these often-destructive forces of nature. Tyler J. Kelley spent two years traveling the heartland, getting to know the men and women whose lives and livelihoods rely on these tenuously tamed streams. On the Illinois-Kentucky border, we encounter Luther Helland, master of the most important—and most decrepit—lock and dam in America. This old dam at the end of the Ohio River was scheduled to be replaced in 1998, but twenty years and $3 billion later, its replacement still isn’t finished. As the old dam crumbles and commerce grinds to a halt, Helland and his team must risk their lives, using steam-powered equipment and sheer brawn, to raise and lower the dam as often as ten times a year. In Southeast Missouri, we meet Twan Robinson, who lives in the historically Black village of Pinhook. As a super-flood rises on the Mississippi, she learns from her sister that the US Army Corps of Engineers is going to blow up the levee that stands between her home and the river. With barely enough notice to evacuate her elderly mother and pack up a few of her own belongings, Robinson escapes to safety only to begin a nightmarish years-long battle to rebuild her lost community. Atop a floodgate in central Louisiana, we’re beside Major General Richard Kaiser, the man responsible for keeping North America’s greatest river under control. Kaiser stands above the spot where the Mississippi River wants to change course, abandoning Baton Rouge and New Orleans, and following the Atchafalaya River to the sea. The daily flow of water from one river to the other is carefully regulated, but something else is happening that may be out of Kaiser and the Corps’ control. America’s infrastructure is old and underfunded. While our economy, society, and climate have changed, our levees, locks, and dams have not. Yet to fix what’s wrong will require more than money. It will require an act of imagination. “With meticulous research and insightful analysis” (Publishers Weekly), Holding Back the River brings us into the lives of the Americans who grapple with our mighty rivers and, through their stories, suggests solutions to some of the century’s greatest challenges.

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Genre : History
Author : Tyler J. Kelley
Publisher : Simon and Schuster
Release : 2022-04-19
File : 256 Pages
ISBN-13 : 9781501187063


Public Works For Water And Power Development And Atomic Energy Commission Appropriations For Fiscal Year 1974

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Genre :
Author : United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Appropriations
Publisher :
Release : 1973
File : 1352 Pages
ISBN-13 : LOC:00170937648


A River In The City Of Fountains

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Founded as a port at the confluence of two great rivers, Kansas City has the waters of the Missouri running through its bloodstream—threading expressways, delivering drinking water, carrying traffic and sewage, and emerging most visibly in the city’s celebrated fountains. Despite, or perhaps because of, the river’s ubiquity, the complex and critical nature of its presence can be hard to understand, which is precisely why Amahia Mallea’s enlightening book is so essential. Moving from the city’s center to the outer limits of the metropolitan area, A River in the City of Fountains offers a clear view of the reach and intricacies of the Missouri River’s connection to life in Kansas City. The history of this connection is one of science and industry working, sometimes at cross-purposes, to bend the river to the needs of commerce and public health. It is a story populated with heroes and villains, visionaries and robber barons, scientists and civil engineers, politicians and activists—all with schemes and plans and far-reaching ideas about what, and whose, demands the power of the Missouri should serve. And so, inevitably, it is a story of disparities: a story of, from one flood to the next, the haves staking out higher ground, leaving the have-nots to the perils of low-lying land. But what the book also shows us is a slow awakening to the ways in which all those vying for the river’s favor are inextricably connected by its course; here we see, finally, a growing awareness of the river’s essential role in the health and welfare of the whole urban environment. In the end, all citizens of Kansas City are both upstream and downstream; all are equally dependent on the health of the river. What this book helps us see is, at last, as much the city in the river as the river in the city.

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Genre : Nature
Author : Amahia K. Mallea
Publisher : University Press of Kansas
Release : 2018-10-15
File : 358 Pages
ISBN-13 : 9780700627110


Rivers

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Explores how these rivers (the planet's two longest rivers, which flow through African deserts and Amazon jungles) came to exist, their place in history, what makes each unusual, and environmental challenges.

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Genre : Juvenile Nonfiction
Author : Laurie Burnham
Publisher : Infobase Publishing
Release : 2007
File : 201 Pages
ISBN-13 : 9781438106700


Connecticut Reports

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Genre : Law reports, digests, etc
Author : Connecticut. Supreme Court of Errors
Publisher :
Release : 1888
File : 666 Pages
ISBN-13 : CORNELL:31924111476168


Connecticut Reports

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Genre : Law reports, digests, etc
Author : Connecticut. Supreme Court
Publisher :
Release : 1888
File : 666 Pages
ISBN-13 : UOM:35112103103364


Water Resources

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Genre : Water resources development
Author : United States. Congress. Senate. Select Committee on National Water Resources
Publisher :
Release : 1960
File : 246 Pages
ISBN-13 : ERDC:35925002296512


Daily Report Foreign Radio Broadcasts

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Genre : World politics
Author : United States. Central Intelligence Agency
Publisher :
Release : 1965
File : 446 Pages
ISBN-13 : OSU:32435063969265