News Release Manager

Dredges move mountains of sand, keep navigation channel open

Published Jan. 17, 2013
VICKSBURG, MISS., January 17, 2013 – The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers deployed as many as 25 dredges during the past nine months to maintain the Mississippi River’s navigation channel and re-open sand-choked harbors between St. Louis and the Gulf of Mexico in response to one of our nation’s most severe droughts.

Beginning in May 2012, and continuing today, Corps and private dredges contracted by the Corps, worked around the clock, seven days a week, to remove sediment deposited by the 2011 flood and fight extreme low-water conditions. Since May, the dredges have moved more than 29 million cubic yards of sediment – enough material to fill 1,333,333 dump trucks, or more than six Louisiana Superdomes, with a weight (67 billion pounds) equal to 92 Empire State Buildings.
Contact
Bob Anderson
601-634-5760

Release no. 13-003