After rapidly overflowing its banks and pouring into homes and businesses along its upper reaches, the Mississippi River has crested in much of the Upper Midwest, easing fears of a record disaster, even though major flooding is forecast to continue in the region through mid-May.

The river was peaking Wednesday at Dam 17, just north of New Boston, Illinois, said Mike Welvaert, a service coordination hydrologist with the North Central River Forecast Center. “We’re looking for the crest between Keokuk (Iowa) and St. Louis over the next two to three days.”

Because major flooding remains along the river in many areas, the weather service warns residents not to enter flooded waters – “hidden debris that the flood has picked up along the way can cause serious injury and/or trap you under the water with strong currents.”

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Forecasts call for little rain in the coming ten days, so the river is expected to begin a slow decline.

Why is the Mississippi River flooding?

Record-setting snow fell in Minnesota and northern Wisconsin over the winter.

Then in early April, “we had a pretty rapid and extreme warmup in the Upper Midwest,” Welvaert said. “It melted all that snow really quickly. That’s what drove the river rises in the Mississippi and its tributaries.”

Portions of the upper Mississippi also received above normal rainfall in April, as much as 4 inches above normal, said the LaCrosse, Wisconsin, weather service office.

As a result:

  • The river reached its highest levels since 2001
  • Upstream of Dubuque, Iowa, the river reached one of its top three flood levels, dating back to the 1800s
  • However, the peak crest of 22.83 feet was nearly three feet below the record
  • Most sites saw a top 5 crest