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Causes for the decline of suspended-sediment discharge in the Mississippi River system, 1940–2007

Dates

Year
2010

Citation

Meade, Robert H, and Moody, John A, 2010, Causes for the decline of suspended-sediment discharge in the Mississippi River system, 1940–2007: Hydrological Processes, v. 24, iss. 1, p. 35-49 LA - en.

Summary

Before 1900, the Missouri–Mississippi River system transported an estimated 400 million metric tons per year of sediment from the interior of the United States to coastal Louisiana. During the last two decades (1987–2006), this transport has averaged 145 million metric tons per year. The cause for this substantial decrease in sediment has been attributed to the trapping characteristics of dams constructed on the muddy part of the Missouri River during the 1950s. However, reexamination of more than 60 years of water- and sediment-discharge data indicates that the dams alone are not the sole cause. These dams trap about 100–150 million metric tons per year, which represent about half the decrease in sediment discharge near the mouth [...]

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Attached Files

Communities

  • USGS National Research Program

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Provenance

Added to ScienceBase on Fri Apr 19 11:11:10 MDT 2013 by processing file <b>Former Project Movement and Storage of Sediment in River Systems.xml</b> in item <a href="https://www.sciencebase.gov/catalog/item/513e5d15e4b07b9dc9e7ea6f">https://www.sciencebase.gov/catalog/item/513e5d15e4b07b9dc9e7ea6f</a>

Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
DOI http://sciencebase.gov/vocab/identifierScheme 10.1002/hyp.7477

Citation Extension

citationTypeJournal Article
journalHydrological Processes
parts
typePages
value35-49 LA - en
typeVolume
value24
typeIssue
value1

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