Title: Six Months After Katrina
1Six Months After Katrina
- slow Recovery
- in
- New Orleans
Thomas McGuire, Author, Amsco School Publications
2New Orleans is located within the delta of the
Mississippi River.
2
3The Big Easy - pre-Katrina
3
4New Orleans is known for all kinds of local color
4
5including Mardi Gras!
5
6New Orleans originated on the broad natural
levees (the high ground) along the Mississippi
River. But the city has expanded into former
swamplands drained and now protected by high,
man-made levees.
6
7Then came Katrina
7
8a strong category 3 hurricane when it struck New
Orleans.
8
9The break in the 17th Street CanalThe next
slide shows the street on the left after the
water was pumped out.
9
10- Flooding hit both poor and middle class
neighborhoods, such as Lakeview, shown here. The
levee is behind the homes to the right.
10
11Satellite images before and during the flood.
(Dark blue is water.)
City Park
City Park
Astro-dome
Astro-dome
11
12- Hurricane winds made for tough sailing!
12
13Red dots show where bodies have been found.
13
- Note the highlighted areas of Lakeview and the
Lower 9th Ward.
14- The power of the flood water was strong
enough to move cars and even whole houses. This
street has been partially cleared.
14
15Rings on buildings show muddy floodwater levels.
15
16The latest in city-wide architectural style is
the pervasive FEMA blue tarp roof.
16
17- FEMA trailers are found throughout the city
even as thousands of trailers remain undelivered.
Water and electrical power must be available
before a trailer is delivered and strapped down.
17
1818
- Even homes that look relatively undamaged
have FEMA trailers parked outside. But the real
story is inside
19- where the walls were soaked with muddy water for
weeks. - Once water invades the walls, mold sets in.
19
20Doors are marked by FEMA personnel recording the
date of inspection and what was found.The O
means that no bodies were foundin this home.
20
21- Fixing the breaks in the dikes took first
priority. Meanwhile officials debate costs and
benefits of a better level of protection from
re-engineered levees.
21
22- Katrina and the flooding unleashed its
greatest wrath in the mostly African-American 9th
Ward. (You are looking down a street.)
22
23The force of water is evident. Note that this
house shows no water level, as it was totally
submerged.
23
24Mississippi Mud settled everywhere.
24
25- Some people escaped the rising water by
making holes in their roofs.
25
26Large parts of the lower 9th still look like a
war zone, even after six months.
26
27Debris is pushed aside to allow junk cars to be
hauled out.
27
28Signs like these remind us that these are not
just houses but peoples lives, waiting for the
next phase of a long chain of demolition and
disappointment.
28
29- When patience and hope falter, humor can help
29
30..when fact imitates fiction.
30
31But, for New Orleans, as the Terminator said,
Ill be back!
31
32Credits
- Thomas McGuire is the author of several of
Amscos Earth science books including his 2005
textbook Earth Science The Physical Setting.
www.amscopub.com -
- Special thanks to Dr. James H. McGuire of Tulane
University and his wife. They sold the brick
house, shown in slides 18-20, just two months
before Katrina. They now own a townhouse well
above sea level on the north shore of Lake
Ponchartrain. The new owners were waiting for
their insurance settlement. -
- The aerial and satellite image, one taken during
the storm as well as maps are not original. - Other images are by the author.
- Authors images taken at the time of
Mardi Gras, Feb 2006
32
33Thomas McGuire is a New York textbook, review
book lab book author with Amsco School
Publications of New York, NY. www.amscopub.com To
ms email cavecreekdigital_at_msn.com Other
PowerPoints are available from the same
author The Grand Canyon from the Bottom Up Utah
Slots (Slot canyons of the Colorado Plateau) Cool
Imposters (Pseudo-Glacial landforms) Glacial
Legacies of New York State Transforming
California (The San Andreas Fault)