2011 Red River flood

2011 Red River flood
Flood waters covering Interstate 29 near Fargo, North Dakota
DateApril 2011 – June 2011
LocationNorth Dakota, Minnesota, Manitoba
Deaths4[1][2]
Property damageUnknown

The 2011 Red River flood took place along the Red River of the North in Manitoba in Canada and North Dakota and Minnesota in the United States beginning in April 2011. The flood was, in part, due to high moisture levels in the soil from the previous year, which meant that further accumulation would threaten the flood-prone region. Flood predictors in Winnipeg were worried that a dual crest of both the Assiniboine River and the Red might crest at the city at the same time.[3] Beginning around April 8, 50 homes were evacuated and two more were flooded after an ice jam in St. Andrews, Manitoba caused the river to flood over its banks.[4]

Three fatalities in the US were blamed on the flood by April 8. Through most of Southern Manitoba, the Red River crest level was below major floods of the past, including those of 1979 and 1950. When the river crested at the James Avenue pumping station in Winnipeg, north of the confluence of the Red and Assiniboine rivers, the measured open-water crest was 19.59 above datum.[clarification needed] The high crest at the James Avenue pumping station was attributed largely to flooding of the Assiniboine River.

  1. ^ "Flood blamed for deaths of 2 North Dakota hunters". Winnipeg Free Press. 8 April 2011.
  2. ^ "61-year-old man drowns in flood waters". Winnipeg Free Press. 9 April 2011.
  3. ^ "Dual flood crests could hit Winnipeg". CBC News. 8 April 2011.
  4. ^ "Fifty homes evacuated in RM of St. Andrews". Winnipeg Free Press. 9 April 2011.