The Dangerous Thing about Deltas
Mark Keim, MD, MBA
Emergency medicine, Disaster medicine, Public health, Emergency management, Business administration, Public policy, Public speaking
A river delta is wetland that forms as rivers empty their water and sediment into another body of water, such as the ocean. They're characteristically triangle-shaped (like the Greek letter, “Delta”).
River deltas are important in human civilization. They are major agricultural production centers and population centers. The great rivers of the world e.g. (Nile, Amazon, Ganges, Pearl, Mekong, Mississippi and Yangtze) all end in a major river delta. And while their strategic location has served as a major benefit to the economic development of the nations where they occur, their topography has also served as a major threat to the people living in delta regions.
River deltas are characteristically low-lying regions and crisscrossed by a network of small tributaries. This makes them very prone to widespread flooding when hurricanes (also known as tropical cyclones or typhoons) make landfall. The flooding occurs as a result of two factors. One factor is the inland flooding of rivers that occurs during hurricane related heavy rainfall. The other factor, perhaps the most deadly, is called “storm surge”.
Storm surge is the abnormal rise in seawater level during a storm. The surge is caused primarily by a storm’s winds pushing water onshore. Contrary to popular opinion, most of the world’s hurricane deaths occur due to storm surge and flooding. It is the water that kills most hurricane victims, not the wind.
The world’s deadliest hurricanes in history have all occurred in river delta regions.
3 of the top 5 deadliest hurricanes in world history all occurred in the Irrawaddy river delta of Myanmar. The 3rd deadliest occurred in the nearby Ganges river delta and the 4th deadliest occurred in the Pearl river delta of China.
The flood threat is expected to grow in all of the world's deltas as result of climate change as hurricanes are expected to become more severe and inland flooding is predicted to become more frequent and severe.
It’s with this in mind, that I hate to see any new tropical storm barreling across the Gulf of Mexico on its way to the Mississippi river delta. And that’s why we should all be thinking of long-term solutions to disaster risk in our Mississippi river delta.
We should be working to make development more sustainable and environmental safety a default, instead of an extraordinary effort that must be mounted every few years in order to survive another storm.
As Dennis Milletti said, “We design our own disasters”. But we can also design a way out of them.
Let’s protect our delta from the next hurricane.
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