Historic low flows turned the Mississippi River into a construction area in 2023, as the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers dredged huge quantities of sand to keep the channel open for barge traffic. Massive machines like the Dredge Goetz, a 225-foot-long vessel with a suction pipe nearly 2 feet wide, were moving through the river constantly to keep it clear.
From May to July, "day in and day out, we were digging," said Tom Heinold, chief of operations for the Rock Island District of the Army Corps of Engineers.
Alternating extremes of heavy rainfall and drought are resulting in wildly varying river levels. For the Corps, which is required by federal law to maintain the Mississippi River for commerce, that makes the multimillion-dollar practice of constant dredging more difficult to predict and plan.
In the upper reaches of the navigable Mississippi River, it's a challenge to place dredged sand in the narrow river landscape — and old agreements for where to put it aren't keeping up with the continuous flow of sediment.
"We've got a mission to accomplish and commercial vessels need to pass," Heinold said. "That's the backbone of our economy out there, and we can't let it fail."
The ability to navigate the river as a whole has deteriorated since 1963, according to a study published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters this year.
A quick switch from flood to drought is one of the most challenging dredging scenarios, said Heinold, whose territory runs from Dubuque, Iowa, to Saverton, Mo. A sudden drop in flow means the water in the river loses velocity, and all the sand flowing with it drops to the bottom.
That scenario unfolded this year, as a springtime slug of snowmelt swelled the upper river, and then almost as quickly, a drought set in. That led sand to pile up in usual choke points — and in some less-expected places, too.