McClellan–Kerr Arkansas River Navigation System

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Template:Short description Template:Use American English Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox canal

File:Kerr-McClellan map.png
A map of the inland waterway system with the McClellan–Kerr Navigation System marked in red
File:Map of McClellan–Kerr Arkansas River Navigation System.jpg
A map of the McClellan–Kerr Arkansas River Navigation System

The McClellan–Kerr Arkansas River Navigation System (MKARNS) is part of the United States inland waterway system originating at the Tulsa Port of Catoosa and running southeast through Oklahoma and Arkansas to the Mississippi River. The total length of the system is Template:Convert.[1] It was named for two senators, Robert S. Kerr (D-OK) and John L. McClellan (D-AR), who pushed its authorizing legislation through Congress. The system officially opened on June 5, 1971. President Richard M. Nixon attended the opening ceremony.[1] It is operated by the Army Corps of Engineers (USACE).[2]

While the system primarily follows the Arkansas River, it also includes portions of the Verdigris River in Oklahoma, the White River in Arkansas, and the Arkansas Post Canal, a short canal named for the nearby Arkansas Post National Memorial, which connects the Arkansas and White Rivers.

Through Oklahoma and Arkansas, dams artificially deepen and widen the modest-sized river to build it into a commercially navigable body of water. The design enables traffic to overcome an elevation difference of Template:Convert between the Mississippi River and the Tulsa Port of Catoosa.[2] Along the section of the Arkansas River that carries the McClellan–Kerr channel, the river sustains commercial barge traffic and offers passenger and recreational use. Here, the system is a series of reservoirs.

Official change of significance

The U.S. Department of Transportation officially announced in early May 2015 that it had upgraded MKARNS from "Connector" to "Corridor" on the National Marine Highway. The announcement also added the Oklahoma Department of Transportation (ODOT) as an official sponsor.[3]Template:EfnTemplate:Efn

In 2015, the USACE increased its designation of the MKARNS from a moderate-use to a high-use waterway system, which means that a waterway carries more than 10 million tons per year, having a value of more than 12 million ton-miles per year.[3]

Construction

The Arkansas River is very shallow through Arkansas and Oklahoma, and was naturally incapable of supporting river traffic through most of the year. To allow for navigation, construction was started in 1963 on a system of channels and locks to connect the many reservoirs along the length of the Arkansas River. The first section, running to Little Rock, Arkansas, opened on January 1, 1969. The first barge to reach the Port of Catoosa arrived in early 1971.

Each lock measures Template:Convert wide and Template:Convert long, the standard size for much of the Mississippi River waterway. Standard jumbo barges, measuring 35 by Template:Convert, are grouped three wide by three long, with a tug at center rear, to form a barge tow that can be fit into a lock. Larger barge tows must be broken down and passed through the lock in sections, and rejoined on the opposite side.[4]

The specifications for the channel itself are:

Although Congress originally authorized USACE to dredge the channel to a depth of Template:Convert in 2005, it did not provide the funds to do so. ODOT says that the capacity of each barge could be increased by 200 tons for each foot of draft.[4] An article in 2010 stated that much of MKARNS is already Template:Convert deep, so that only about Template:Convert would need to be deepened. The article quoted Lt. Col. Gene Snyman, then deputy commander of the USACE's Tulsa District, as saying such a project would cost about $170 million (in 2010 dollars).[5]

Lock information

Template:GeoGroup The tables below list the features of the navigation system, from the Mississippi River to the origin at the Port of Catoosa. Except as noted, all locks are on the Arkansas River.

No lock 11 exists; sequentially, it would have been in the middle of Lake Dardanelle. Per the animated system map (see "External links"), Dardanelle Lock and Dam (lock 10), which forms Lake Dardanelle, is the highest facility on the system (54 feet between upper and lower pools); Ozark-Jeta Taylor Lock and Dam (lock 12), just above that lake, is the third-highest (34 ft). Thus, those two facilities likely were redesigned, in terms of height and possibly location, so as to eliminate lock 11 as originally planned. The Mississippi River lock is numbered lock 99, as it was added to the system after it was completed.

McClellan–Kerr Arkansas River Navigation System Locks and Dams
Feature Navigational distance
from Mississippi River
Location Coordinates Photo
Arkansas
Montgomery Point Lock and Dam
(Lock 99)
Template:Convert White River Template:Coord Montgomery Point Lock & Dam August 25, 2005 USACE|
Norrell Lock and Dam
(Lock 1)
Template:Convert Arkansas Post Canal Template:Coord File:Norrell Lock and Dam, Arkansas.jpg
Lock 2 Template:Convert Arkansas Post Canal Template:Coord
Wilbur D. Mills Dam Template:Convert Arkansas County /Desha County Template:Coord File:Wilbur D. Mills Dam.jpg
Joe Hardin Lock and Dam
(Lock 3)
Template:Convert Jefferson County Template:Coord File:Joe Hardin Lock and Dam, Arkansas River.jpg
Emmett Sanders Lock and Dam
(Lock 4)
Template:Convert Pine Bluff Template:Coord
Col. Charles D. Maynard Lock and Dam
(Lock 5)
Template:Convert Jefferson County Template:Coord
David D. Terry Lock and Dam
(Lock 6)
Template:Convert Pulaski County Template:Coord
Murray Lock and Dam
Lock 7
Template:Convert Little Rock Template:Coord Murray Lock in Little Rock, Arkansas
Toad Suck Ferry Lock and Dam
(Lock 8)
Template:Convert Conway Template:Coord
Arthur V. Ormond Lock and Dam
(Lock 9)
Template:Convert Morrilton Template:Coord
Dardanelle Lock and Dam
(Lock 10)
Template:Convert Dardanelle /Russellville Template:Coord Dardanelle Lock and Dam (Lock 10)
Lock 11 Never constructed
Ozark-Jeta Taylor Lock and Dam
(Lock 12)Template:Efn
Template:Convert Ozark Template:Coord
James W. Trimble Lock and Dam
(Lock 13)Template:Efn
Template:Convert Barling Template:Coord
Oklahoma
W. D. Mayo Lock and Dam
(Lock 14)
Template:Convert Fort Coffee Template:Coord File:161102-A-IF821-182 L-n-D-14-1024x683.jpg
Robert S. Kerr Lock and Dam
(Lock 15)
Template:Convert Sallisaw Template:Coord Aerial view of Robert S. Kerr Lock and Dam, impounding Robert S. Kerr Reservoir on the Arkansas River
Webbers Falls Lock and Dam
(Lock 16)
Template:Convert Webbers Falls Template:Coord File:USACE Webbers Falls Lock and Dam.jpg
Chouteau Lock & Dam
(Lock 17)
Template:Convert Wagoner (Verdigris River) Template:Coord Chouteau Lock and Dam in Wagoner County, Oklahoma, August 23, 2007.
Newt Graham Lock and Dam
(Lock 18)
Template:Convert Inola (Verdigris River) Template:Coord Newt Graham Lock and Dam on the Verdigris River in Wagoner County, Oklahoma
Port of Catoosa Template:Convert Catoosa (Verdigris River) Template:Coord File:Aerial photo of the Tulsa Port of Catoosa taken May 5, 2008.jpg

2019 Arkansas River flooding

Extremely heavy rains hit the Arkansas River upstream of Keystone Dam during late May and early June 2019. So much water poured into the Keystone Reservoir in a short time that it quickly became evident that a major release of water would be needed to prevent overtopping the dam, causing devastating floods downstream. Even so, water rushed downstream toward MKARNS at such a high rate that officials at USACE halted barge traffic to avoid calamities such as collisions or hitting trees and debris afloat in the river.[6]

By October, barge traffic was allowed on a limited basis. Normally, tows comprise 12 to 16 barges. However, the flood carried so much silt down river that redredging would be required to return to normal traffic patterns. In October, the tows were limited to six barges (two wide and three deep).[6]

The 2019 flood deposited about 1.5 million cubic yards of sediment into the waterway, As of February 2020, barge traffic remained limited by tow size and restricted to daylight hours only due to sediment. USACE was expected to complete the dredging of sediment by late May 2020.[7]

Waterway traffic control

The growth of business along MKARNS has greatly increased congestion at the locks. The Secretary of the Army has directed USACE to establish these priorities for admitting vessels to each lock:

  1. Vessels owned by the U.S. government
  2. Commercial passenger vessels
  3. Commercial vessels (e.g., barges)
  4. Rafts
  5. Pleasure and other craft

No minimum size is required for watercraft using the locks. Craft as small as canoes, dinghies, and kayaks have all been allowed to use the locks, either alone or with multiple other vessels at the same time. If commercial traffic is heavy, pleasure craft may be required to wait about 1.5 hours or may be allowed to lock through with commercial vessels.[8]

See also

Notes

Template:Notelist

References

Template:Reflist

External links

  1. a b O'Dell, Larry. "McClellan-Kerr Arkansas River Navigation System". Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture.
  2. a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  3. a b "Oklahoma Waterway Takes Prestigious Step Up in National Status (PRESS RELEASE)". U.S. Department of Transportation. May 15, 2015.
  4. a b "McClellan-Kerr Arkansas River Navigation System 2016 Inland Waterway Fact Sheet". Oklahoma Department of Transportation. 2016. Accessed June 16, 2017.
  5. Kramer, Kirk (October 17, 2010). "Going deeper – Deeper channel would boost business". Muskogee Phoenix. Accessed June 20, 2017.
  6. a b Morgan, Rhett (October 11, 2019). "Limited waterway traffic returns to McClellan-Kerr Arkansas River Navigation System". Tulsa World. Accessed October 22, 2019.
  7. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  8. army.mil Template:Bare URL PDF