The Pak Banker

NASA looks at Louisiana delta system, eyes global forecasts

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Erosion, sinking land and sea rise from climate change have killed the Louisiana woods where a 41-year-old Native American chief played as a child. Not far away in the Mississipp­i River delta system, middle-school students can stand on islands that emerged the year they were born.

NASA is using high-tech airborne systems along with boats and mudsloggin­g work on islands for a $15 million, five-year study of these adjacent areas of Louisiana. One is hitched to a river and growing; the other is disconnect­ed and dying.

Scientists from NASA and a halfdozen universiti­es from Boston to California aim to create computer models that can be used with satellite data to let countries around the world learn which parts of their dwindling deltas can be shored up and which are past hope.

"If you have to choose between saving an area and losing another instead of losing everything, you want to know where to put your resources to work to save the livelihood of all the people who live there," said lead scientist Marc Simard of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

While oceans rise because of climate change, the world's river deltas home to seafood nurseries and more than 300 million people -- are sinking and shrinking.

To figure out where to shore up dying deltas, NASA is studying water flowing in and out of Louisiana's Atchafalay­a and Terrebonne basins, sediment carried by it, and plants that can slow the flow, trap sediment and pull carbon from the air. Louisiana holds 40% of the nation's wetlands, but they're disappeari­ng fast -- about 2,000 square miles (5,180 square kilometers) of the state have been lost since the 1930s. That's about 80% of the nation's wetland losses, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

Using two kinds of radar and a spectromet­er that measures more colors than the human eye can distinguis­h, high-altitude NASA airplanes have been collecting informatio­n such as water height, slope, sediment, and the types and density of plants. Some measuremen­ts are as precise as a couple of centimeter­s (less than an inch).

On boats and islands, scientists and students from across the country take samples and measure everything from currents to diameters of trees. Their findings will be used to calibrate the airborne instrument­s.

"I've been working here 15 years, and one of the toughest parts about working in a delta is you can only touch one little piece of it at any one time and understand one little piece of it at one time," said Robert Twilley, a professor of oceanograp­hy and coastal sciences at Louisiana State University. "Now we have the capability of working with NASA to understand the entire delta."

The Mississipp­i River drains 41% of the continenta­l United States, collecting 150 million tons (130 million metric tons) of sediment per year. But, largely because of flood-prevention levees, most sediment shoots into the Gulf of Mexico rather than settling in wetlands.

"Deltas are the babies of the geological timescale. They are very young and fragile, in a delicate balance of sinking and growing," NASA states on the Delta-X project website.

In geological time, young means thousands of years. On that scale, Louisiana's Wax Lake Delta is taking its first breaths. It dates to 1942, when the Army Corps of Engineers dug an outlet from the lake to reduce flood threats to Morgan City, about 20 miles (32 kilometers) away. Sediment from the Atchafalay­a River filled the lake, then began creating islands in the Gulf.

The new islands are thick with black willows and, in spring, thigh-high butterweed topped with small yellow flowers. Older wetlands in areas surveyed by Delta-X aircraft are more diverse, their soil rich with humus from generation­s of plants. Along nearby Hog Bayou, blue buntings and scarlet tanagers dart through magnolia branches and skinks skitter up trees. In swamps, ospreys nest atop bald cypresses and alligators float in the water below.

In addition to working at LSU, Twilley has spent about nine years as executive director of Louisiana Sea Grant College Program, which uses the Wax Lake Delta as a classroom for middle- and high-school students.

"We take kids and make them stand on land that was formed the year they were born." Twilley said. In contrast, the adjacent Terrebonne Basin is shrinking so rapidly that the government is paying to move the Isle de Jean Charles band of Biloxi-Chitimacha­Choctaw Indians from a vanishing island to higher ground.

That band isn't the only Native American group losing ground. "The wooded areas we used to run through as children they're dead," said Chief Shirell Parfait-Dardar of the Grand Caillou/Dulac Band of Biloxi-Chitimacha Indians, based less than 50 miles (80 kilometers) from the Wax Lake Delta.

"Ghost forests" are common in degrading deltas where salt water intrudes as land sinks and erodes, LSU's Twilley said. Louisiana is considerin­g two projects that would divert Atchafalay­a River sediment to build land in the Terrebonne Basin, but a decision is more than a year away, according to the state Coastal Restoratio­n and Preservati­on Authority.

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