Showing posts with label river bank cars. Show all posts
Showing posts with label river bank cars. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 29, 2019

Thursday, February 02, 2017

the flood of the Blacksmith Fork and Logan rivers in 2011, resulted in 1 federal fund to fix the river bank, and they dug out 100 years of junk, and 50 cars


In early 2012 — after the damage was done — the federal government approved $7 million in grant money to complete a major restoration project along the river banks

 After a months-long permitting process, truckloads of tree stumps and large branches, sediment, rocks, gravel and boulders were scooped out of the river and hauled away.

 And then, there were the rusty, vintage car bodies, City Public Works Manager Bill Saunders estimates as many as 50 cars have been pulled from the river in the last month, and 100,000 tons of metal has just been taken to a local recycling facility.

 Some of the cars may have been dumped in the river when they were no longer useful, but others were very clearly placed there with a purpose: to stabilize the banks of the river at some other time when the river banks failed.


the circled areas were all cleared out to set the river into a straighter faster flowing channel


when the floods go past the normal river banks, it's easy to see the natural width of the valley floor that thousands of years of floods created.... and that humans always ignore when building towns, cities, and homes

http://news.hjnews.com/allaccess/river-bank-revival-old-cars-among-debris-unearthed-in-rehab/article_83b9bc2a-cb0e-11e2-b2b7-0019bb2963f4.html

Along the Ohio River

Friday, May 06, 2016

a car lined pond near Genoa, NE



https://www.facebook.com/Kevins-Rust-in-Peace-1518931078411009/?fref=nf


here is what it looks like from satellite view on Google Earth.

This was a common way to prevent riverbank erosion from flood waters, and these stacks of crushed junkyard cars are also known as riprap. America has them everywhere, Google Image search "cars on the river bank" and you'll see what a polluted river country we are. The Rio Grande, the Yellowstone River


http://billingsgazette.com/news/local/gallery-cars-on-the-yellowstone/collection_00e8cc4b-952f-5eae-b1d1-3d24d1908fe9.html


this is in North Carolina, John the Carpet Bagger was out looking to find why some random cars were on a river bank, and learned all about the practice that is now around 50 years old. Big rocks must have been more expensive than just clearing out the junkyards of demolition derby dead cars.  http://www.thecarpetbagger.org/2013/04/automotive-riverbank-preservation.html

and on the Bighorn River in Montana
about 4 bends of the river north of Ft Smith 

Monday, February 29, 2016

Blake found a forest stream in Iowa on the Meskwaki settlement banked with junkyard cars in the 50s or 60s


The govt tried to prison them on a res in Kansas, but they weren't going with that bullshit, and hid out in Iowa, eventually suing the govt to buy land and make their own settlement.






https://www.facebook.com/blake.buffalo?fref=ufi&rc=p

Putting cars on river banks was common, it was found to be a cheap way to reduce erosion. Trouble is, it pollutes the water running though, and by the cars, as the oils, grease, brake and transmisson oils leaked out into the ground. When the cars are washed by rains or river water the iron, chromium, and lead from solder and batteries gets into the river water.

I'm shocked no scrap metal guys have pulled these out and had them crushed. I'm not for crushing cars in general, but for river bank polluters, I'm strongly for it

http://justacarguy.blogspot.com/2015/07/shoring-river-banks-with-wrecked-cars.html  even Life magazine photographed it http://justacarguy.blogspot.com/2014/07/before-environment-was-considered.html 

Wednesday, June 05, 2013

Very unusual thing, a support wall of junkyard cars to brace an airfield boundary from runoff water corrosion




the location is only told as Southern California, and that the airfield was used because the location is so remote. http://www.thegentlemanracer.com/2012/02/lost-california-great-wall-of-cars.html

I've posted a similar riverbank of junkyard cars a couple years ago, I've no idea how to find that post though

Saturday, December 18, 2010

Sitting and Rusting thread on the HAMB

Sitting for 35 years.
the size of the tree trunk though this body indicates many decades of not being disturbed





The above is a DeSoto converted into a truck because the owner had a body shop, but not cash for a truck