2011 Souris River flood
The 2011 Souris River flood was greater than the hundred-year flooding event for the Souris.[1][2] The US Army Corps of Engineers estimated the flood to have a recurrence interval between 200 and 500-years.[3] The Souris River is a tributary of the Assiniboine River, which it meets near Treesbank, Manitoba. The Assiniboine meets the Red River of the North in Winnipeg, Manitoba. The flooding has affected Saskatchewan and North Dakota, and overtopped levees in Minot, North Dakota causing the evacuation of about 11,000 residents. The flooding in Minot was worse than the 1969 flood and 1881 flood. Many other towns along the river were affected and many acres of farmland were inundated.
Contents
Background
Flooding in Saskatchewan the previous summer,[4] in addition to heavy snowfall and a thick snowpack from the previous La Niña winter added to overflow on rivers across North America. Since May 2011, heavy rains and thunderstorms driven by a series of cut off lows migrating westward triggered more flooding on watersheds in the southern Prairie Provinces, as some communities received nearly the annual rainfall in less than two months.
Flood effects
Saskatchewan
In early May, flash flooding occurred between the Souris River source and the Assiniboine River, as Kingsley No. 124, Saskatchewan saw its worst flooding in over 50 years.[5] Towards late May, barely half Saskatchewan's agricultural crops had been seeded, while southeastern Saskatchewan, surrounding the Souris River was the worst-hit.[6] However, even as the flooding continued in northern Saskatchewan, Alberta, and the Northwest Territories, significant fires burned while the weather remained dry and lightning was able to spark new blazes.[7]
On June 17, Weyburn, Saskatchewan became one of 19 provincial communities to declare a state of emergency from the severe flooding, after a power outage caused the failure of the city's waste treatment plant; Saskatoon, surrounding the South Saskatchewan River, also experienced street-level floods.[8] The next day, more flash flooding resulted in flooded homes and basements from Regina to Weyburn, while Estevan declared a state of emergency from flooding.[9]
By June 19, a dike breech flooded the village of Roche Percee, Saskatchewan, forcing about 150 residents to evacuate.[10] A trailer park in downstream Estevan also evacuated about 400 people.[11][12] Several major highways, including part of Highway 47, Saskatchewan Highway 56 and the Trans-Canada Highway 1 near Sintaluta were closed due to flooding damage.[13] By June 21, Estevan had recorded 324 mm (12.8 in) of rain since May 1, making it the wettest two-month May–June period on record, while the average annual rainfall in Estevan is 333 mm (13.1 in). Water was released from two area dams to ease the pressure on the local reservoirs. At the start of summer, the flood crest moved downstream into the United States.
North Dakota
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Forecasters and hydrologists anticipated a full dike breech on the Souris by June 25 or 26 after the river began overtopping it on June 22. Close to 12,000 residents were evacuated from Minot, North Dakota.[14][15]
The flood was expected to exceed the 1969 levels, while residents seek relief in evacuation shelters nearby.[16][17][18]
On June 24, the Souris River exceeded record flood levels at Minot. By June 26, all hydrographs on the Souris from the North Dakota side had recorded record-breaking flood levels, with the exception of Lake Darling, which was less than 0.2 ft (6.1 cm) from record stage.
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Mion8 hg.png
Hydrograph of observed and predicted river levels for the Souris River at Minot at 2 AM CDT on June 25, 2011.
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June 2011 Flooding in Minot, North Dakota.jpg
Natural-colour satellite image of Minot taken just as the River Souris reached its historic crest.
Manitoba
Manitoba officials began preparing for the third time in 2011 for Souris flooding in late June as communities were expecting record flooding,[19] after already experiencing flooding on the Red River and the Assiniboine River, which amounted to a 300-year flood. Also lake levels at Lake Manitoba will continue to be high or may even rise more due to the high flows on the Souris River that flows into the Assiniboine east of Brandon near Treesbank. The province has stated that the flood protection and the Portage Diversion will be pushed to their limits again.
At least 85 families were evacuated from Souris, Manitoba by June 27. On July 2, 2011 the army from CFB Shilo was sent in to help with the sandbagging and building up of dykes. The river crested at Melita on July 4, at Souris on July 5 and Wawanesa on July 6. With dry weather the peak levels were a little lower than forecast and the dikes held. See the record from Manitoba Water Stewardship's daily flood report for July 7, 2011.
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Souris Peaks.JPG
Souris River Peaks
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Souris River in Minot, N.D.jpg
Shortly after water overtopped levees in Minot. Also, dikes protecting infrastructure.
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Pedestrian bridge that fell into the Souris River.jpg
Debris piled up on the Victoria Bridge in Minot
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National Guard, USACE support historic flood flight in Minot.jpg
North Dakota National Guard soldiers place poly over temporary emergency levee on June 2, 2011.
See also
- 2011 Mississippi River flood
- 2011 Missouri River floods
- 2011 Assiniboine River flood
- 2011 Red River flood
References
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External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to 2011 Souris River flood. |
- Minot Floods: A Town Devastated — slideshow by Life magazine
- Minot: When The Water Recedes Documentary produced by Prairie Public Television
- Minot Rebuilding Dreams Documentary produced by Prairie Public Television
- Pages with broken file links
- Articles with dead external links from January 2013
- Commons category link is defined as the pagename
- 2011 floods
- Floods in Canada
- Floods in the United States
- 2011 disasters in Canada
- 2011 natural disasters in the United States
- Minot, North Dakota
- Natural disasters in North Dakota
- Natural disasters in Saskatchewan
- Natural disasters in Manitoba
- 2011 in North Dakota
- 2011 in Saskatchewan
- 2011 in Manitoba