All right. Time for another science spotlight. This time, we sit right back at home.
The Mississippi River. Arguably one of the most importantant rivers in the world (3rd in length), they are thinking of moving [nytimes.com] the exit of the Mississippi from it's current home, and split the river past New Orleans, in the hopes of adding sediment to some of the areas at the end of the delta. This move will have to be planned out carefully, and the meeting they've scheduled for later this year is just to plan on the planning phase of this procedure.
I can see why they would want to do this: each year, the Mississippi dumps tons of sediment out of it's mouth. In order to build more marshlands and bird-wading areas, they want to direct the sediment outward. Implementing this would be difficult, though - it would involve a lot of complex calculation: how much force the water would push on a barrier, where the sediment should be dumped, how redirecting will change the velocity of the water, how much interference a barrier could create in the water, and other factors playing in and interconnecting.
I say we leave it be. Why should we, as humans, try to mess with something nature has been creating for the past thousands of years? It seems that the river knows what it's doing, as long as we keep out of it.
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got it
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