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Post-Katrina Study Shows Strength of Salt Marshes

Just a few months after the 2005 storms, this salt marsh appears almost untouched by the hurricanes. The area was hit by a 14-foot (4.5 meter) storm surge and 6-foot (2-meter) waves, yet managed to survive largely intact.
(Image credit: Duncan FitzGerald and Zoe Hughes, Boston University.)

Hurricanes Katrina and Rita sent devastating waves through Louisiana's coastal plains in 2005, washing away hundreds of square miles of the state's wetlands.

Yet post-hurricane surveys of the Breton Sound, a large area of marshes along the state's southeastern edge, left researchers puzzled. All of the sound's wetlands suffered an equal pounding, yet the storms destroyed certain areas and left others relatively intact.

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Andrea Mustain was a staff writer for Live Science from 2010 to 2012. She holds a B.S. degree from Northwestern University and an M.S. degree in broadcast journalism from Columbia University.