kennadog
Dog On It!
Huge risk. And much of the delta habitat would be destroyed by the influx of salt water.So this global warming, whether man made or not, is a risk to Sacramento.
Huge risk. And much of the delta habitat would be destroyed by the influx of salt water.So this global warming, whether man made or not, is a risk to Sacramento.
Huge risk. And much of the delta habitat would be destroyed by the influx of salt water.
So this global warming, whether man made or not, is a risk to Sacramento.
Global warming, natural or man-made has nothing to do with it. The Sacramento and San Joaquin valleys are at risk from atmospheric river storms that derive copious amounts of moisture from the tropical Pacific. Such storms are otherwise called the "pineapple express”.
The most notable examples of this phenomena in modern times are the floods of February 1986 and January 1997. Those events were small compared to floods of 1861/1862, though.
From early December 1861 through January 1962 a 45 day rain event soaked the valley with 25+ inches of rain. Foothill locations received two to three times that amount. The resulting flooding was state wide. Downtown Sacramento as well as the majority of the central valley was underwater for months. Boat travel was literally the only means of transpiration in the valley. The water was said to be of a depth that only the tops of telegraph poles were visible. If there had been satellite pictures at the time, they would have shown a shallow lake that stretched from Bakersfield to Red Bluff and from the coast range to the Sierras.
Of course, this happened pre industrial revolution. Long before manmade atmospheric pollution was even an issue. I mention this because it’s gotten to the point where almost anything the weather does or could do is automatically blamed on global warming.
People need only to study a bit of climatic history to learn that the past is filled with extreme weather events that in many cases eclipse anything we’ve experience in our life times.
Everyone should read "Battling the Inland Sea" - a book discussing the history of flooding and levees in the Sacramento Valley. A very interesting book. The title refers to the multiple events (similar to the one Rookie is discussing) of flooding and how politics and land development (including mining in the foothills and mountains) impact the rivers and levees, etc.
And yes, the flooding used to take place back when only Native Americans were living here. Before "global warming" or "climate change" was a concern.
The ocean is rising along the coast of California. Fact. Levees break. Fact. This affects Sacramento. Fact. I said nothing political. Are the rail road yards in the flood zone?
ehhhhhhhh.. I don't think the oceans are rising enough though.. The earth has cycles and we are not creating a cycle with greenhouse gasses..
The ocean is rising along the coast of California. Fact. Levees break. Fact. This affects Sacramento. Fact. I said nothing political. Are the rail road yards in the flood zone?
The ocean is rising along the coast of California. Fact. Levees break. Fact. This affects Sacramento. Fact. I said nothing political. Are the rail road yards in the flood zone?
Source of facts please! The one's that prove that the ocean is rising, not the one proving that levees break. Levee's have been breaking for 200 years for a thousand different reasons, but mostly because of excessive rain and snow flooding the rivers. The levee's broke over 30 years ago in Marysville before anyone even mentioned global warming.
I don't know how people got the idea that Sacramento is at risk from rising sea levels. If the sea ever rose enough to inundate the delta and flood the valley, we'd all be screwed along with everyone else in the world living anywhere near the coast or near coastal rivers at low elevations.
If you go back a 100 years, or even less, the valley used to flood regularly. It wasn't until they built all the levee's up and down the delta that we ended up with what we have today. Thats why a lot of the farm areas are called islands. They only exist because of the levee's that were built.
Very true. But it never flooded because of sea levels. That's the thing i don't get, is what would cause people to link rising sea levels with valley flooding. The sea would have to rise at least 15-20 feet, probably more for that to be a possibility. A sea level rise of that magnitude would be a world wide catastrophe. It's just a bit odd that anyone would make the jump from downtown flooding to sea level rise.
Source of facts please! The one's that prove that the ocean is rising, not the one proving that levees break. Levee's have been breaking for 200 years for a thousand different reasons, but mostly because of excessive rain and snow flooding the rivers. The levee's broke over 30 years ago in Marysville before anyone even mentioned global warming.
I don't want to get into a global warming debate, but your absolutely right. And in my opinion, its a political football being used to make some industries and certain people wealthy. Nothing more than more goverment intrusion into our lives. And I'll leave it at that.
Yeah Sacramento flooding has only been a concern with what's happening up the hill and running into the Sacramento and American Rivers. The ocean levels are of little concern here.
Uh wrong. The ocean tides change the level of the sacramento river and surrounding sloughs by over 5 feet each day.
No, it's still of little concern. Run off into the rivers and dam releases cause the levels to rise to flood danger levels. I know of no such danger coming from tidal influences.
I think the original levees are just piles of "stuff" mainly dirt. Water can bubble through them and not even need to go over the top. In the Pocket Area, water can be seen trickling into the streets having traversed the trek from through the levee, bubbling into a backyard, and then draining into the streets. Pretty shakey. Fixing that almost means starting over and of course that can't be done.
Hmmm....keep meaning to get flood insurance, even though its not "required" in my area. And buy that dinghy.The levees were typically placed by hydraulic dredging/fill placement. The (predominantly) silt and sand soils were dredged from the river bottom and placed along the river banks without compaction effort or consideration of soil composition. These levees are of poor quality and are prone to damage in earthquakes.
I think the original levees are just piles of "stuff" mainly dirt. Water can bubble through them and not even need to go over the top. In the Pocket Area, water can be seen trickling into the streets having traversed the trek from through the levee, bubbling into a backyard, and then draining into the streets. Pretty shakey. Fixing that almost means starting over and of course that can't be done.
Beavers, squirrels, etc can dig holes/dens that cause leaks too.