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October
23, 2006 New research finds
that every U.S
Gulf Coast bay in Texas and Louisiana is vulnerable to significant
flooding and
expansion within the coming century due to a combination of rising seas
and
reduced silt flowing from dammed up rivers. "Looking back over
the past
10,000 years, we find the evolution of each of these bays is punctuated
by
rapid flooding events that result in landward shifts in bay
environments of
tens of kilometers and increases in bay area up to 30 percent within a
century
or two," said John Anderson, the W. Maurice Ewing Chair in Oceanography
and professor of earth science at Rice University in Houston. "These
flooding events can be triggered by either a rapid increase in sea
level or a
rapid decrease in the amount of silt flowing into the bay, and there's
ample
evidence to suggest that both of those will occur in each of these bays
during
the coming century." Anderson's results
are based on
his research group's analysis of dozens of sediment core samples
drilled during
the past decade from Galveston, Corpus Christi and Matagorda bays, all
in
Texas; Calcasieu Lake in Louisiana; and Sabine Lake, which straddles
the
Texas-Louisiana border. "Over the past
10,000 years,
there are an average of a half-dozen of these flooding events in each
bay," In the past century,
multiple
dams were constructed on each of the rivers flowing into each of these
bays. In addition, there
is a growing
body of evidence that sea level will increase more rapidly in the 21st
Century
than it has in several thousand years. Based on marine
sedimentary
records, oceanographers know that sea level has been rising for the
past 10,000
years, but the rate at which it's rising has been slowly falling for
about
5,000 years. But that trend is apparently changing, with the latest
satellite
data indicating that seas worldwide are rising at an average rate of
five
millimeters per year – a striking contrast to the rate of two
millimeters per
year that was recorded by tide gauges throughout most of the 20th
Century. In some locations,
warming water
temperatures, land subsidence and other factors can exert a local
influence,
causing sea level to rise even faster. This also appears to be the case
along
the Texas-Louisiana coast, which is sinking by an average of two
millimeters
per year, and up to twice that much in certain areas. "Bay-head deltas are
just
like the wetlands that have been disappearing in southeastern "At that time, the
head of
the bay was somewhere north of I-10, but sediments flowing back into
the bay
from the Trinity River pushed that back south to the present location,
creating
Lake Anahuac in the process," Anderson said. "The creation of ## Jade
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