Scott began photographing sites along the Mississippi just before the flood of 1993, and her images reflect the sweep of the river's history, from formations from the Pleistocene era to damage left by Hurricane Katrina. Wielding her large-format camera along the river's entire stretch, she captures important sites--places like Bayou de View in the Arkansas "Big Woods," where the Ivory-billed Woodpecker was sighted in 2004, and the Timbalier Island, a barrier island and hurricane speed bump--that represent both what Americans have done to change the river and our current attempts to restore its damaged ecosystems.
In 200 dramatic color photographs, Scott illustrates the geographical and botanical features of the river and shows how its wetlands were formed by glacial melt and the river's meandering. In accompanying text, she explains how we have changed each site depicted and how we try to manage it and notes the wildlife that occupies it. She describes what is being done to restore the islands and side channels on the Upper Mississippi, forests in the lower alluvial valley, and coastal marshes along the Gulf of Mexico. She also reveals the role of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers first in changing the river, then in working to restore it, as well as the Corps' relationship with Congress.
No one has ever before attempted such a vast photographic documentation of the Mississippi River, capturing so many sites in all their diversity and complexity while also discussing ongoing geologic processes and human history. This majestic book is nothing less than a natural biography of the Mississippi, showing that, to understand the river and its floodplain today, we must understand the natural processes we have disrupted. It is both a rich documentary source and a fascinating overview for anyone captivated by this quintessential feature of the American landscape.