Laserfiche WebLink
<br />001153 <br /> <br />LIST OF FIGURES <br /> <br />Fig. <br />1. The Hydrologic Cycle <br /> <br />2. Watersheds and Drainage Divides <br />3. Major Watersheds and Planning Regions of the U.S. <br /> <br />4. Cross-section of a Riverine Floodplain <br /> <br />5. One Floodplain Shared by Two States: The Connecticut River Serves <br />As the Boundary between Vermont and New Hampshire . <br /> <br />6. Big Thompson Creek, Colorado, May 1977, Nine Months after Flash <br />Flood That Took 139 Lives <br /> <br />7. West Springfield, Mass., during Connecticut River Flood of March, <br />1936 <br /> <br />8. Federal Disaster Assistance, 1972-79 <br /> <br />9. Although 17,000 Communities Participate in NFIP There Are Some <br />Foot Draggers <br /> <br />10. A Major Objective of Floodplain Management Is to Warn the Unin- <br />formed Investor of Potential Hazards <br /> <br />11. Regional Special Districts Play Important Roles in Flood Control and <br />Water Allocation <br /> <br />12. Interstate and International Boundary Rivers of the U. S. <br /> <br />13. Political Jurisdictions along the Pearl River at Jackson, Mississippi <br /> <br />14. Flooding behind Corps Levee at Jackson, Miss., April 1979 <br /> <br />15. Emergency Dike Erected around Vital Electrical Facility in Jackson, <br />Miss., April 1979 <br /> <br />16. Flooding in Haikey Creek Watershed, May 1975 <br /> <br />17. Political Jurisdictions Sharing Haikey Creek Watershed, Vicinity of <br />Tulsa, Oklahoma, 1978 <br /> <br />18. New Construction next to Haikey Creek at Broken Arrow, Okla- <br />homa, July 1977 <br /> <br />19. Homemade Dike in Response to Increased Flooding from Upstream <br />Development <br /> <br />iii <br />