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English, 18.12.2020 22:40 leem6

In the following passage from Rising Tide: The Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 and How It Changed America, contemporary writer John M. Barry describes the complex mechanics of the Mississippi River. Read the passage carefully. Then, in a well-written essay, analyze how Barry communicates his fascination with the river to his readers. the river’s characteristics represent an
extraordinarily dynamic combination of turbulent effects, and river hydraulics quickly go beyond the merely complex. Indeed, studies of flowing water in
devastating result, the Missouri and upper Mississippi put no strain on the levees along the lower Mississippi.)
The Mississippi never lies at rest. It roils. It follows

5 the 1970s helped launch the new science of chaos, and James Gleick in his book on the subject quotes physicist Werner Heisenberg, who stated that on his deathbed he would like to ask God two questions: why relativity? and, why turbulence? Heisenberg
10 suggested, “I really think God may have an answer to the first question.”
Anything from a temperature change to the wind to the roughness of the bottom radically alters a river’s internal dynamics. Surface velocities, bottom
15 velocities, midstream and mid-depth velocities—all are affected by friction or the lack of friction with the air, the riverbank, the riverbed.
But the complexity of the Mississippi exceeds that of nearly all other rivers. Not only is it acted upon; it 20 acts. It generates its own internal forces through its size, its sediment load, its depth, variations in its bottom, its ability to cave in the riverbank and slide sideways for miles, and even tidal influences, which affect it as far north as Baton Rouge. Engineering 25 theories and techniques that apply to other rivers, even such major rivers as the Po, the Rhine, the Missouri, and even the upper Mississippi, simply do not work on the lower Mississippi, which normally runs far deeper and carries far more water. (In 1993, 30 for example, the floodwaters that overflowed, with
35 no set course. Its waters and currents are not uniform. Rather, it moves south in layers and whorls, like an uncoiling rope made up of a multitude of discrete fibers, each one following an independent and unpredictable path, each one separately and together
40 capable of snapping like a whip. It never has one current, one velocity. Even when the river is not in flood, one can sometimes see the surface in one spot one to two feet higher than the surface close by, while the water swirls about, as if trying to devour itself.
45 Eddies of gigantic dimensions can develop, sometimes accompanied by great spiraling holes in the water. Humphreys observed an eddy “running upstream at seven miles an hour and extending half across the river, whirling and foaming like a 50 whirlpool.”
The river’s sinuosity itself generates enormous force. The Mississippi snakes seaward in a continual series of S curves that sometimes approach 180 degrees. The collision of river and earth at these
55 bends creates tremendous turbulence: currents can drive straight down to the bottom of the river, sucking at whatever lies on the surface, scouring out holes often several hundred feet deep. Thus the Mississippi is a series of deep pools and shallow “crossings,” and
60 the movement of water from depth to shallows adds still further force and complexity.

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