The Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway is a large body of water that is used by commercial and private shallow draft vessels. The waterways is maintains by the US Army Corps of Engineers for 1,088 miles between places like Norfolk, Virginia and Miami Florida. The AIWW is authorized to 12 feet deep and 90 feet wide through land cuts and 150 feet in open water areas (capca).
The U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, Albert Gallatin, submitted a comprehensive plan to bring the new nation together with roads and canals system sponsored by the government in 1808 (capca). He came up with this ideal of creating an inland waterway along the Atlantic coast from Boston, Massachusetts, to St. Mary’s, Georgia. The ideal would mainly need the construction of four canals, which was estimated to cost $3 million. He thought that his whole program could be completed in ten years (capca).
From 1907 to 1947 the Atlantic Deeper Waterways Association was organized in Philadelphia to lobby for the construction of an inland waterway from Boston to Key West (capca). In 1947 The entire Intracoastal Waterway continued a series of variously named projects until 1947, when all but the last two of the southern reaches were collectively chosen the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway between Norfolk, Virginia and St. Johns River, Florida (capca). The ship canals comprising the waterway in the north and the sections between the St. Johns River and Key West continue to stay separate projects. The Deeper Waterways Association was dissolved, its members believing that their work was done.
In 1999 the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway Association encouraged the continuation and further development of waterborne market and restoration on the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway of places ...
... middle of paper ...
... 4000 jobs alone, without maintenance on the bridge North Carolina lost 1723 jobs (capca).
One of cons of the safety zone is by the coast guard shutting down the movement of the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway is that they would put people out of work that depend on the waterway to get there jobs done on the daily bases, like fishermen, cruise ships and shipping companies. This could cause for companies to be faced with economic trouble, which might jeopardizes the companies’ future. With people jobs on the line the safety zone cannot go on for along period of time without causing trouble, this would cause for the people working on the bridge to rush and leave the bridge incomplete or half done. I think the Safety Zone would be the best way to go to complete the bridge project successfully without having any complication or fear of someone tampering with the bridge.
Another aspect that caught my attention was the simply idea that could change the direction of a country. It is undisputed that when someone has an idea, the only way to see it is simply atreviendoce realizer to carry it out. In this case, the governor of New York State Ell was quie he promoted the construction of this canal.
The Erie Canal was a man made water way that stretched to be three hundred sixty three miles long. The canal started construction in1817, and took nine years to completely finish the building process. People during this time had many positive, and negative opinions about the fact that this expensive canal was being built. The idea of the Erie Canal originates with Jesse Hawley, the idea was to connect the great lakes to the Atlantic ocean making an easy path to the west from the east without having to pass Niagara Falls. The canal was mostly built by Irish immigrants who were hated, or disliked, by most people. People had ideas and predictions about what would come of this canal. Let's just see which of the predictions were more accurate to
of water to the west of the Outer Banks of North Carolina for the Pacific
The National Bank created a standarad form of currency and helped pay off the revolutionary war debt. In 1816, there was a second twenty year charter. It was founded during the administration of U.S. President James Madison to stabilize currency. The estblaishment of a national bank led improvements in transportation because now roads could be paid for. These Improvements in Transportations were good for communication around the nation, which helped send messages faster. In 1818, the national road started the growing road systems that tied the new west to the old east. The Erie Canal was built in New York and runs from the Hudson River to Lake Erie, connecting the Great Lakes with the Atlantic Ocean.
Other politicians were opposed to this, such as Thomas Jefferson and James Madison. Their opposition to the plan went away as assumptions became associated with other less controversial plans of Hamilton’s. Madison even turned in defense of the plan after being convinced of Hamilton’s financial vision (Bowers 61). Hamilton made a compromise, turning out in his favor when he allowed Madison and Jefferson to have a capital on the Potomac River. This allowed him to pass his plan more easily while giving up something of little importance to him or the country’s wellbeing (Bowers 65).
Nature designed Florida to be one large marine ecosystem. Florida is one big sand peninsula located below the 40th longitudinal North American line. Three bodies of salt water (Gulf of Mexico, Strait of Florida and Atlantic Ocean) surround three out of four directions of Florida. Man-made canals, natural lakes, rivers and estuaries are confined within the State of Florida’s physical boundaries. All of these form an interlocking system of waterways that impact the interconnected marine environment (marine ecosystem). All of Florida’s waterways are connected back to the surrounding bodies of water while passing through Florida’s sub-tropical and temperate zones and impact the delicate marine ecosystem balance. Man and nature are causing a negative impact to this region like never before. Hurricanes, lack of green initiatives, garbage, pollution and the stripping of natural resources for population growth are decimating Florida’s natural ecosystems.
In 1850, the side wheeler “Columbia”, which commenced regular services between Astoria and Portland in 1850, was the first steamship to ply Columbia as a common carrier. Half a dozen steamships soon joined her on interior waters, and their numbers greatly increased after the gold discoveries of the 1860s (Schwantes, 181).
The first and most challenging problem associated with building the Mackinac Bridge arrived long before the bridge was even designed. Financing such an enormous project was no easy feat. In 1928, the idea of connecting the upper and lower peninsulas was proposed to Congress for the first time (Brown 4). At the time, the suspected bridge project was very much under government scrutiny and control. In fact, the initial boost in interest in pursuing the construction of a bridge came about due to the depression. The Public Works Administration (PWA) had been created under President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal economic plan which would fund certain construction projects with th...
Louisiana’s coast is considered a “working coast.” This means that it is home to infrastructure such as pipelines, highways, and ports that have great significance to the national economy. Coastal erosion wears away at these industries causing a
To begin to appreciate some of the problems, the initial mandate of the waterway and how it has been traditionally facilitated must be examined. From the beginning, the basics of the system were clear...
The Erie Canal is a waterway in New York that runs 363 miles from Albany, New York, on the Hudson River to Buffalo, New York, at Lake Erie, completing a navigable water route from the Atlantic Ocean to the Great Lakes. The canal contains 36 locks which allows a boat to go from one level of a water to another level lower by raising the water level in one section which lets the boat move from one lock to the next. By doing this, the Erie Canal makes a once non-accessible waterway a common mean of transportation for both goods and people.
Following this proclamation, the U.S. Congress enacted legislation in 1953 in the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act (OCSLA), which addressed the control of resource exploitation at the continental shelf by both the federal and state authorities. By so doing, the government wanted to ensure that natural resources at the coast and in the sea were exploited but in the right and legal manner. This perhaps would lead t...
Surface current are found in the upper four hundred meters (400m) and makes up about ten percent (10%) of ocean (Briney, n.d.). Surface ocean currents are as a result of friction between the water and atmosphere interface. The wind exerts a force or stress to the ocean surface and causes the water to move. The winds that most affect the oceans’ currents are the Westerlies which produce belts of ocean currents that flow east in the mid-latitude and the Trade winds which generate currents that flow to the west in tropical latitudes. These winds are mainly a result of warm air from the tropics moving towards the poles. The direction of the current is not the same as the direction of the wind but it is deflected at a forty five degree angle. This deflection is resulted from the earth’s rotation on its axis called the Coriolis force/ effect. Coriolis force and constrains by continental land masses cause surface currents to develop into an alm...
Hence, ten years later the Oceana foundation was established “exclusively to protect and restore the oceans on a global scale”. Their mission is to encourage offshore wind energy and assist in halting further offshore mining/drilling namely in the Atlantic Ocean which directly aids the coastal waters of the Southeastern, United States. Oceana has predicted the
In 1993, the Department of Defense supplied an Ocean Policy Review Paper on “the currency and adequacy of U.S. ocean policy, from the strategic standpoint, to support the national defense strategy,” which established that U.S. national security interests in the oceans have been protected even though the U.S. is not in the UNCLOS (U.S. D.O.D. 76-94). The practices of the United States over the course of the last 300 years has created the very routine law of the sea that is the foundation of UNCLOS’s navigational provisions. Therefore it is not right to say that the U.S. may benefit from the convention’s navigational provisions if it were to join it (Groves).