The Mississippi Jetties of James B. Eads.
One of the most difficult problems ever solved by an American engineer was the making navigation safe for vessels of fairly deep draft in the lower branches of the Mississippi. The difficulties were overcome by James B. Eads, of St. Louis, in his system of jetties. He remarked, says his biographer, Mr. Louis How, that other things being equal, the amount of sediment which a river can carry is in direct proportion to its velocity. When, for any reason, the current becomes slower at any special place, it drops part of its burden of sediment at that place, and when it becomes faster again it picks up more. Now, one thing that makes a river slower is an increase of its width, because then there is more frictional surface; and contrariwise, one of the things that makes it faster is a decrease of its width. Narrow the Mississippi then, at its mouth, said Eads, and it will become swifter there, and consequently will remove its soft bottom by picking up the sediment (of which it will then hold much more), and by carrying it out to the gulf, to be lost in deep water and swept away by currents, you will have your deep channel. In other words, if you give the river some assistance by keeping its current together, it will do all the necessary labor and scour out its own bottom. This sound reasoning, based upon observation as sound, was duly embodied in a series of jetties which have proved successful.