 | Attorney General Jay Nixon toured the flood-damaged Taum Sauk reservoir area on Dec. 19. More than 1 billion gallons
of water were released after the reservoir gave way on Dec.
14, carving a path down Proffit Mountain that carried away
trees and topsoil and exposed the bedrock. The breach is in
top right corner of the reservoir. |
 | The campgrounds at Johnson’s
Shut-Ins State Park in Reynolds County were destroyed
by the waters. |
 | Attorney General Nixon, right, and William Bryan, deputy chief counsel of Nixon's
Agriculture and Environment Division, take a first-hand
look at the devastation in the state park. |
 | An aerial photo shows the 600-foot-wide breach in the 55-acre reservoir atop
Proffit Mountain. The floodwaters scoured a path that
removed trees and topsoil down to the bedrock. |
 | The view from the bottom
of Proffit Mountain, showing the path carved by 1 billion
gallons of water released from the upper Taum Sauk reservoir.
Before the reservoir gave way, the area now bare was
covered with trees. A newly formed scour hole was created
by the flood. |