Dike (construction)

Dike (construction)

A dike (or dyke), levee, levée, embankment, floodbank or stopbank is a natural or artificial slope or wall, usually earthen and often parallels the course of a river. [ Citation | title=Levees and Other Raised Ground | author=Henry Petroski | publisher=American Scientist | year=2006 | volume=94 | issue=1 | pages=pp. 7-11 ] The modern word "dike" is most probably derived from the Dutch word "dijk", since the construction of dikes is well attested in the Netherlands since the 12th century. The 126 km long Westfriese Omringdijk, for instance, was completed by 1250, and was formed by connecting existing older dikes. The Roman chronicler Tacitus already mentions that the rebellious Batavi pierced dikes to flood their land in order to cover their retreat (AD 70). [Tacitus "Histories" V 19] The Dutch word "dijk" originally meant both the "trench" and the "bank". The word is closely related to the English verb "to dig" (EWN).

In Anglo-Saxon, the word "dic" already existed and was pronounced with a hard c in northern England and as "ditch" in the south. Similar to Dutch, the English origins of the word lie in digging a trench and forming the upcast soil into a bank alongside it. This practice has meant that the name may be given to either the excavation or the bank. Thus Offa's Dyke is a combined structure and Car Dyke is a trench, though it once had raised banks as well. In the midlands and north of England, and in the United States, a dike is what a ditch is in the south, a property boundary marker or small drainage channel. Where it carries a stream, it may be called a running dike as in "Rippingale Running Dike", which leads water from the catchwater drain, Car Dyke, to the South Forty Foot Drain in Lincolnshire (TF1427). The Weir Dike is a soak dike in Bourne North Fen, near Twenty and alongside the River Glen.

It is known in American English (notably in the Midwest and Deep South) as a levee, from the French word "levée" (from the feminine past participle of the French verb "lever", "to raise"); the term came into English use in New Orleans circa 1720. [ [http://dictionary.oed.com/cgi/entry/50132348?query_type=word&queryword=levee&first=1&max_to_show=10&sort_type=alpha&result_place=1&search_id=f7cp-VPipF4-2854&hilite=50132348 Oxford English Dictionary] , "levee" n.1. Retrieved September 5, 2008.]

Artificial dikes

The main purpose of an artificial dike is to prevent flooding of the adjoining countryside; however, they also confine the flow of the river resulting in higher and faster water flow. Dikes can be mainly found along the sea, where dunes are not strong enough, along rivers for protection against high-floods, along lakes or along polders. Furthermore, dikes have been built for the purpose of empoldering, or as a boundary for an inundation area. The latter can be a controlled inundation by the military or a measure to prevent inundation of a larger area surrounded by dikes. Dikes have also been built as field boundaries and as military defences. More on this type of dike can be found in the article on dry-stone walls.

Dikes can be permanent earthworks or emergency constructions (often of sandbags), built hastily in a flood emergency. When such an emergency bank is added on top of an existing dike, it is known as a "cradge".

Dikes were first constructed in the Indus Valley Civilization (in Pakistan and North India from circa 2600 BC) on which the agrarian life of the Harappan peoples depended. [http://history-world.org/indus_valley.htm The Indus Valley. Accessed June 11, 2006] Also dikes were constructed over 3,000 years ago in ancient Egypt, where a system of dikes was built along the left bank of the River Nile for more than 600 miles (966 km), stretching from modern Aswan to the Nile Delta on the shores of the Mediterranean. The Mesopotamian civilizations and ancient China also built large dike systems. Because a dike is only as strong as its weakest point, the height and standards of construction have to be consistent along its length. Some authorities have argued that this requires a strong governing authority to guide the work, and may have been a catalyst for the development of systems of governance in early civilizations. However others point to evidence of large scale water-control earthen works such as canals and/or dikes dating from before King Scorpion in Predynastic Egypt during which governance was far less centralized.

Dikes are usually built by piling earth on a cleared, level surface. Broad at the base, they taper to a level top, where temporary embankments or sandbags can be placed. Because flood discharge intensity increases in dikes on both river banks, and because silt deposits raise the level of riverbeds, planning and auxiliary measures are vital. Sections are often set back from the river to form a wider channel, and flood valley basins are divided by multiple dikes to prevent a single breach from flooding a large area. A dike made from stones laid in horizontal rows with a bed of thin turf between each of them is known as a "spetchel".

Artificial dikes require substantial engineering. Their surface must be protected from erosion, so they are planted with vegetation such as Bermuda grass in order to bind the earth together. On the land side of high dikes, a low terrace of earth known as a "banquette" is usually added as another anti-erosion measure. On the river side, erosion from strong waves or currents presents an even greater threat to the integrity of the dike. The effects of erosion are countered by planting with willows, weighted matting or concrete revetments. Separate ditches or drainage tiles are constructed to ensure that the foundation does not become waterlogged.

Prominent dike systems exist along the Mississippi River and Sacramento Rivers in the United States, and the Po, Rhine, Meuse River, Loire, Vistula, the river delta in the Netherlands and Danube in Europe.

The Mississippi River levee system represents one of the largest such systems found anywhere in the world. They comprise over 3,500 miles (5,600 km) of dikes extending some 1,000 miles (1,600 km) along the Mississippi, stretching from Cape Girardeau, Missouri to the Mississippi Delta. They were begun by French settlers in Louisiana in the 18th century to protect the city of New Orleans. The first Louisianan dikes were about 3 feet (0.9 m) high and covered a distance of about 50 miles (80 km) along the riverside. By the mid-1980s, they had reached their present extent and averaged 24 feet (7 m) in height; some Mississippi levees are as much as 50 feet (15 m) high. The Mississippi levees also include some of the longest continuous individual dikes in the world. One such dike extends southwards from Pine Bluff, Arkansas for a distance of some 380 miles (611 km).

Dikes are very common on the flatlands bordering the Bay of Fundy in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia Canada. The Acadians who settled the area can be credited with construction of most of the dikes in the area, created for the purpose of farming the fertile tidal flatlands. These dikes are referred to as "aboiteau". In the Lower Mainland around the city of Vancouver, British Columbia, there are dikes to protect low-lying land in the Fraser River delta, particularly the city of Richmond on Lulu Island. There are also dikes to protect other locations which have flooded in the past, such as land adjacent to the Pitt River and other tributary rivers.

Natural dikes

Dikes are commonly thought of as man-made, but they can also be natural. The ability of a river to carry sediments varies very strongly with its speed. When a river floods over its banks, the water spreads out, slows down, and deposits its load of sediment. Over time, the river's banks are built up above the level of the rest of the floodplain. The resulting ridges are called natural dikes.

When the river is not in flood state it may deposit material within its channel, raising its level. The combination can raise not just the surface, but even the bottom of the river above the surrounding country. Natural dikes are especially noted on the Yellow River in China near the sea where oceangoing ships appear to sail high above the plain on the elevated river. Natural dikes are a common feature of all meandering rivers in the world.

Dikes in tidal waters

The basic process occurs in tidal creeks when the incoming tide carries mineral material of all grades up to the limit imposed by the energy of the flow. As the tide overflows the sides of the creek towards high water, the flow rate at the brink slows and larger sediment is deposited, forming the dike. At the height of the tide, the water stands on the salt-marsh or flats and the finer particles slowly settle, forming clay. In the early ebb, the water level in the creek falls leaving the broad expanse of water standing on the marsh at a higher level.

The area of water on the marsh is much greater than the water surface of the creek so that in the latter, the flow rate is much greater. It is this rush of water, perhaps an hour after high water, which keeps the creek channel open. The cross-sectional area of the water body in the creek is small compared with that initially over the dike which at this stage is acting as a weir. The deposited sediment (coarse on the dike and on the mud flats or salt-marsh) therefore tends to stay put so that, tide by tide, the marsh and dike grow higher until they are of such a height that few tides overflow them. In an active system, the dike is always higher than the marsh. That is how it came to be called "une rive levée", or raised shore.

Dike failures and breaches

Man-made dikes can fail in a number of ways. The most frequent (and dangerous) form of dike failure is a "breach". A "dike breach" is when part of the dike actually breaks away, leaving a large opening for water to flood the land protected by the dike. A breach can be a sudden or gradual failure that is caused either by surface erosion or by a subsurface failure of the dike. Dike breaches are often accompanied by boils, or "sand boils". A sand boil occurs when the upward pressure of water flowing through soil pores under the dike (underseepage) exceeds the downward pressure from the weight of the soil above it. The underseepage resurfaces on the landside, in the form of a volcano-like cone of sand. Boils signal a condition of incipient instability which may lead to erosion of the dike toe or foundation or result in sinking of the dike into the liquefied foundation below. Complete breach of the dike may quickly follow.

Sometimes dikes are said to fail when water "overtops" the crest of the dike. "Dike overtopping" can be caused when flood waters simply exceed the lowest crest of the dike system or if high winds begin to generate significant swells in the ocean or river water to bring waves crashing over the dike. Overtopping can lead to significant landside erosion of the dike or even be the mechanism for complete breach. Properly built dikes are armored or reinforced with rocks or concrete to prevent erosion and failure.

Recently, scientists from the Netherlands, created a fieldlab for dike experiments: IJkdijk (Dutch for "calibration dike"). Dikes are build and destroyed for increased understanding of failure mechanisms and the development of sensor systems.

New Orleans

The words "levee" and "levee breach" were brought heavily into the public consciousness after the levee failures in metro New Orleans on August 29, 2005 when Hurricane Katrina passed east of the city. Levees breached in over 50 different places submerging 80 percent of the city. Most levees failed due to water overtopping them but some failed when water passed underneath the levee foundations causing the levee wall to shift and resulting in catastrophic sudden breaching. The sudden breaching released highly pressured water that moved houses off their foundations and tossed cars into trees. This happened in the Ninth Ward when the Industrial Canal breached and also in the Lakeview neighborhood when the 17th Street Canal breached. Effects of breached levees are discussed further in and 2005 levee failures in Greater New Orleans, which cites a death toll of 1,464. In New Orleans, the US Army Corps of Engineers is, by federal mandate, the sole federal agency responsible for levee design and construction as defined in the Flood Control Act of 1965. Fault has been aimed at the Corps of Engineers, their local contractors, and local levee boards. [Cite web | title = New Study of Levees Faults Design and Construction - New York Times | accessdate = 2008-09-12 | url = http://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/22/us/22corps.html?_r=1&oref=slogin ]

Other breaches

The St. Elizabeth's flood of 1421 was caused by a surge of seawater being forced upriver during a storm, overflowing the river dikes and submerging approximately 300 square kilometres of land (over 100 square miles) in The Netherlands. Estimates of people having died range from 2,000 to 10,000. Parts of the submerged lands have still not been reclaimed resulting in the Biesbosch wetlands.

The Great Mississippi Flood occurred in 1927 when the Mississippi River breached levees and flooded convert|27000|sqmi|km2|-3, killing 246 people in seven states and displacing 700,000 people.

During the North Sea flood of 1953, in the night of 31 January1 February 1953 many dikes in the provinces of Zeeland, Zuid-Holland and Noord-Brabant in the Netherlands proved not to be resistant to the combination of spring tide and a northwesterly storm, killing 1,835 people. A further 307 people were killed by dike breaches in the United Kingdom, in the counties of Lincolnshire, Norfolk, Suffolk and Essex.

On 3 June, 2004, Jones Tract, an inland island that is protected by a series of levees located in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, failed. Though the exact cause of the dike failure is not known, the breach in the dike allowed water from the Middle River to flood the island.

On January 5, 2008, a levee in Fernley, Nevada burst, flooding portions of the town and forcing the evacuations of 3,500 residents.

ee also

*Dam
*Levee
*Seawall
*Floodway
*Subsidence

Footnotes

References

*Ordnance Survey Pathfinder 856 (1:25 000 Sheet TF12)
*Oxford English Dictionary ISBN 0-19-861212-5
* EWN : Etymologisch Woordenboek v/h Nederlands 2004

External links

* [http://www.levees.org Levees.Org (non-profit based in New Orleans)]
* [http://www.discovervancouver.com/GVB/richmond.asp Richmond's Dyke system]
* [http://www.deltaworks.org DeltaWorks.Org] Flood protecting dams, dikes and barriers project in the Netherlands
* [http://books.google.com/books?id=5dowAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA783&lpg=PA783&dq=spetchel&source=web&ots=e61KQjuHIZ&sig=_db-yT1ozSOjFB5V1xKkXDJQGew Dictionary of Archaic and obsolete phrases]


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