The Chattahoochee River is located in Georgia and flows southwesterly towards Alabama. Evidence indicates that humans have been inhabitants of the Chattahoochee River for an extremely long period. Dating to 1000 B.C., the Kolomoki complex near present-day Blakely is one of the best-known sites of these ancient civilizations. During the Mississippian Period (A.D. 800-1600), at least sixteen significant settlements dotted the Chattahoochee's banks south of the fall line. As these civilizations died because of exposure to European diseases, native survivors from other areas moved into the river valley below present-day Atlanta. (Lynn Willoughby) By the late 1830s, the Chattahoochee River was used as an industrial power source for textile …show more content…
These dams lead to want for more an in 1953 Congress authorized the Apalachicola-Chattahoochee-Flint Project. Today the Chattahoochee River is used as a water source more than a source for transportation. It supplies water to the regional economies of Georgia, Alabama, and Florida. The Chattahoochee River has become increasingly along the years. The Chattahoochee's pollution problem increases due to the many components such as the construction site sediment that runs off the north Georgia mountains as well as irrigation field runoff from farms. Bacteria, oil, grease, metal, and trash are picked up from the runoff and flow to the Chattahoochee, which has detrimental effects on the ecosystem. Also the sewer system has served a part in the pollution of the Chattahoochee, because the sewer system in Atlanta isn’t at the level where it can accommodate the growing population and its water …show more content…
I have realized that even though I am only one person, I have a huge and often times detrimental impact on the environment. Although, I occasionally recycle bottles and cans at my home, the HHW project gives me an opportunity to turn a simple and seemingly insignificant effort, into a large scale community project. I specifically chose this project because I wanted to take part in the effort to decrease our need for landfills and other methods of mass trash disposal. In recycling, raw materials that have already been obtained are used, which reduces the need for more materials to be extracted. If we recycle enough to slow the rate of extraction bringing it lower or equal to the rate that our resources replenish themselves we are living sustainable. This project is especially important because it focuses on recycling objects that take a lot of resources to make and that can't be organically broken
This source is useful because it gives detail at the time the Buford dam was created, the 2009 ruling, and the 11th Circuit Appeal. Compared to the other sources, this source details out the specifics of the purpose of the dam and how
The Neuse River has played a vital role throughout much of the history of North Carolina. In recent decades however the river has seen degradation of its health and ecology via massive amounts of point and non-point source pollution. The result has been numerous events of eutrophication, resulting in the ecological “dead zones” found throughout the river. Notable contributors of this pollution have been industrial plants and agriculture, most notably power plants and hog farms. As a result, federal and state agencies have enacted strict regulations and water quality standards and procedures to monitor the tributaries, estuarine areas, and main stem of the greater Neuse River watershed.
The most notable transboundary river for residents of Atlanta is the Chattahoochee. Leaving its source in the North Georgia Mountains, it eventually drains into the Apalachicola River which whose mouth is located in the Gulf of Mexico. The Chattahoochee is notable because on its damming and the creation of Lake Lanier in the 1950s. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers provided the money and resources for the dam’s construction and operate the lake itself. Since a federal agency operates the systems and was funded by other states, water claims by Alabama and Florida are constant.
The Conodoguinet Creek is approximately 90 miles long and flows into the Susquehanna River. It is located in south-central Pennsylvania and consists of many bends and turns, thus establishing the name Conodoguinet, which is Native American for “a long way with many bends”.
It has came to mind that the Big Sioux River located in the Eastern Part of South Dakota is a very polluted river. It is so polluted that its the 13th highest polluted water source in the United States. Therefore the people around this river, this is a very important to the people around because this is there main water source. People may ask why is this river so polluted and its because of the toxic waste from us humans. Every time you go to the bathroom all this waste ends up going into the river and even when you take a shower all the chemicals that go in your hair or for your body from the soap end up going into the river.
Hydrologic studies has always been the subdiscipline of environmental science that has most intrigued me; probably because the eco- and geological systems that comprise surface and shallow groundwater systems are so inexorably entwined and very delicate. Both of the virtual labs were interesting, and paint a clear picture of how we affect our hydrosphere and how that, in turn, affects us. Spotsylvania County and the city of Fredericksburg share four water treatment facilities that pull water from the Mott's Run Reservoir, the Ni River, and the Rappahannock River, which is the largest river in the local area, the other two being smaller tributaries that feed into it. The Rappahannock River is a significant body of water, providing the potable water for roughly a quarter-million people. Toward the coast the river sees mostly recreational and some light industrial use, and further upstream it is affected by many small to midsized agricultural operations that take place on the land adjacent to the river.
The buffer can filter out the stuff we put in our lawns, stop the silt that washes off places where we dig and contain pollutants from lawns and roads. These pollutants have another way to get in to the Chattahoochee, they flow virtually unchecked into the river from hundreds of miles of creeks that thread through the water shed. Silt is sent down stream because of nearby construction. The greatest danger to the creeks and to the water shed is land disturbing activities that lead to erosion, whether it is tearing out plants and trees along the banks or lack of fence systems to hold dirt. Local governments over seen by the state authority boards are responsible for enforcing state laws on erosion control. But when faced with the pressure and desire to increase tax, few local governments stand in the way of development. Even the latest growing counties have at most a few people to enforce the law. Donald Mitchell, chief soil and erosion inspector in Fulton Count, compares his job to "dropping a bucket of golf balls on a driveway and having to pick 'em up before they hit the street." His job is part cop and part educator. He needs to make sure everyone is educated on the issue so that people know what to do. Erosion into the creeks that feed the Chattahoochee is even more severe a problem than direct run-off into the river, as
The formation of the Atchafalaya River takes place over a millennia. Over a thousand years ago, the Atchafalaya River didn't even exist. It was only the Red River that ran parallel to the Mississippi River. Over the next 500 years, the Mississippi River would change course and create a small westward turn. Overtime this small turn would grow into a large turn be named Turnbull’s Bend. Turnbull’s bend eventually intersected the Red
From its headwaters northwest of Denver in the Rocky Mountains, the 1,450-mile long river and its tributaries pass through parts of seven states: Arizona, California, Colorado, New Mexico, Nevada, Utah and Wyoming and is also used by the Republic of Mexico. Along the way, almost every drop of the Colorado River is allocated for use.
The Atchafalaya River was created over 1000 years ago. It was formed because of the mighty Mississippi river. It plays a very important role in the everyday lives of the Louisiana people. The conceivable redirection of the Mississippi River and man1s push to oppose it, present one of the best stream designing issues ever experienced. The proof that backings the case that catch of the Mississippi by the Atchafalaya is inevitable, is accessible and plentiful. Information on the decay of the limit of the Mississippi underneath Old River and the expanding limit of the Atchafalaya has been gathered and validated. Geotectonic movement a1 so shows that the inclination toward preoccupation is expanding.
The Au Gres River drains approximately 245 square miles. The river starts in Ogemaw County and flows south to its discharge into Lake Huron, similar to the Rifle River. The upper sections of the river flows through forested land; and agricultural land becomes more apparent as you reach Iosco County.
Prior to the year 1401, the Mississippi River and the Red River were unassociated with one another and ran in almost parallel directions. After the start of the 15th century, the Mississippi began heading west making Turnbull’s Bend and intersecting with the Red River. This westward loop, after being connected to both rivers, became a distributary of the Mississippi River (Micah Bennett, 2013). When the Choctaw Indians arrived in 1760, they named this distributary
One river that flows through a city would be the Hudson river in New York. In Los Angeles, the Santa Clara river flow so the southern parts of the city. The third river that flows through a city would be the San Jacinto river that flows through Montgomery county and goes into Lake Houston, in Houston, Texas. In the city of Philadelphia in Pennsylvania, the Schuylkill River clothes from the West to the eastern part of the state. Lastly, there is the Columbia River that
The Snake River starts in Yellowstone Park, which is in Wyoming, and ends when merging with the Columbia River. (shown in Figure A) This covers an area of 278,450 square kilometers. The upper side of the Snake River is used for irrigation, this section is heavily regulated by dams. There was an incident in 1976 where one of the dams, Teton Dam, collapsed and resulted in major flooding. The middle region of the Snake River is used to create hydroelectricity, this encourages the irrigation process to be competed. The purpose of the lower section is to provide opportunity for recreational activities. The river has brought attention over the water quality; agricultural runoffs are making pesticides, nitrate, and phosphate evident in the water
The Mississippi River is the largest river system in the United States, as well as all of North America, at more than 2,300 miles long. It is the fourth longest river and the tenth most powerful river in the world. Originating at Lake Itasca, Minnesota, it flows slowly southwards until it ends about 95 miles below New Orleans, Louisiana where it begins to flow to the Gulf of Mexico. Along with its major tributary, the Missouri River, the river drains all or parts of 31 U.S. states stretching from the Rocky Mountains in the west to the Appalachian Mountains in the east to the Canadian border on the north, and includes most of the Great