Posts Tagged ‘Tennessee’
INVESTOR’S SPECIAL
2 Bed/ 1 Bath house W/Garage – Right on the Tennessee River.
The house has 3 floors, with the first floor being a garage to store your car, boat or jet ski.
The 2nd floor has a kitchen, living room, 2 bedrooms and a bathroom and is livable right now.
The 3rd floor is unfinished attic space which is big enough to make more living area if wanted.
This home has a nice wrap around deck that offers beautiful views of the Tennessee River.
Fishing is great and the area is even better.
Only $99,900
This is the best deal going on a riverfront property, so hurry before it’s too late!
If you have any questions, feel free to call me anytime
Tim Crane
731-607-0118
str8loball@gmail.com
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http://str8loball2.postlets.com
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Duration : 0:6:33
Mississippi River nearing historic flood levels at Mud Island in Memphis, TN on May 1, 2011.
Duration : 0:1:2
Would you consider the field service industry if it would bring in income or addition income for you monthly. First I would like to ask you do you have a digital camera?, second can you upload photos?, third do you have access to the internet?. Do you have transportation?. Are you willing to learn how to run your own small business or add on an extra service that is urgently needed?. North America is mostly into services, not as a whole but the service industry is big buisness. The Inspection Manual will show you how to run a home based field service buisness, by performing inspections were you just take two photos of property, document the condition of the property. Here is an example of the type of foreclosure inspections are and what they pay to field inspectors:
Occupancy Inspections (Exterior): $20 each
Initial Vacant Property Inspection (Addt’l Units): $30 each
Vacant Property Inspection (On-going): $30 each
Vacant Property Inspection (On-going/Addt’l Units): $25 each
Occupancy Inspection (Addt’l Units): $10 each
Initial Vacant Property Inspection (Interior): $35 each
Duration : 0:2:28
Enjoy the colorful breath-taking beauty of the 27,000 acre canyon carved out by 26 miles of the Tennessee River over thousands of years. It is the fourth largest river canyon east of the Mississippi and the only large river canyon bordering a mid-size city.
Duration : 0:5:48
CBS News correspondent Mark Strassmann reports from Dyersburg, Tenn. on the unprecedented flooding occurring along the Mississippi River.
Duration : 0:2:3
Driving east on Interstate 155 from Caruthersville MO to Dyersburg TN looking south. Just past the bridge, the Bunge grain bins can be seen with sandbags protecting it. Flood stage is 32 feet. River is at 44.3 feet with crest forecasted to be 48 feet on 5-7-2011. Video really doesn’t show how much water there is. Couldn’t capture everything on the MO side because of the trees.
Duration : 0:2:47
All video credits to CNN and their affiliates.
Segment 1 — An exclusive aerial view of the devastation caused by flooding along the Mississippi River.
Segment 2 — Authorities caution residents not to feed wild animals.
Segment 3 — Memphis is on high alert as the Mississippi River continues to rise.
Segment 4 — A Kentucky couple is devastated over their flooded home.
Segment 5 — Missouri homeowners return to more than just water inside.
Segment 6 — The partial shutdown of Interstate 40 in Arkansas due to high water has huge impact on a small town.
Segment 7 — Residents of a mobile home park in Illinois return home for the first time since evacuating from flooding.
Segment 8 — Satellite images reveal the devastation caused by flooding along the Mississippi River.
Tagged: Mississippi River flooding massive floods mass evacuations natural disaster catastrophe central United States Louisiana Arkansas Tennessee Kentucky Missouri Illinois Indiana Ohio River FEMA flood zone floodwaters devastation destruction evacuees food shortages Obama NLE 2011 New Madrid May 2011 CNN News
Duration : 0:13:50
I was filming this video this morning (Monday 5/9/11) of the swollened Mississippi River, near Jefferson Davis Park! The park is now partly flood as the river continues to raise! It’s suppose to crest at 48 feet this even at 7pm Centrel Standard Time! This will be Memphis, Tennessee’s worst flood since 1937! Many people thoughout Memphis, Shelby County, and other parts of the U.S. along the Mississippi have lose thier homes and much of thier property! Lets keep our thoughts and prayers with the victoms of this historic flood and if you can, give your support!
Duration : 0:1:18
CBS News correspondent Mark Strassmann reports from Dyersburg, Tenn. on the unprecedented flooding occurring along the Mississippi River.
Duration : 0:2:3
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Thursday May 19 2011 10:05 am
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mississippi_River
The Mississippi River is the largest river system in North America. About 2,320 miles (3,730 km) long, the river originates at Lake Itasca, Minnesota, and flows slowly southwards in sweeping meanders, terminating 95 miles (153 km) by river below New Orleans, where it begins to flow to the Gulf of Mexico. Along with its major tributary, the Missouri River, the river drains all or parts of 31 U. S. states stretching from the Rocky Mountains in the west to the Appalachian Mountains in the east to the Canada–US border on the north, including most of the Great Plains, and is the fourth longest river in the world and the tenth most powerful river in the world. The current form of the Mississippi River basin was largely shaped by the Laurentide Ice Sheet of the most recent Ice Age. The southernmost extent of this enormous glaciation extended well into the present-day United States and Mississippi basin. When the ice sheet began to recede, hundreds of feet of rich sediment were deposited, creating the flat and fertile landscape of the Mississippi Valley. During the melt, giant glacial rivers found drainage paths into the Mississippi watershed, creating such features as the Minnesota River, James River, and Milk River valleys. When the ice sheet completely retreated, many of these ‘temporary’ rivers found paths to Hudson Bay or the Arctic Ocean, leaving the Mississippi Basin with many features ‘oversized’ for the existing rivers to have carved in the same time period. The Mississippi River Delta has shifted and changed constantly since the formation of the river, but the construction of dams on the river has greatly reduced the flow of sediment to the delta. In recent years, the Mississippi’s mouth has shown a steady shift towards the Atchafalaya River channel, but because of floodworks at the river’s mouth, this change of course—which would be catastrophic for seaports at the river mouth—has so far been held at bay. Some researchers believe that due to natural forces inherent to river plains, it is a matter of time before this event takes places and that it becomes more likely each year. Hundreds of Native American tribes have depended on the Mississippi River and its tributaries for thousands of years. Although they knew the river by many different names, it was the Ojibwe word misi-ziibi, meaning Great River, or gichi-ziibi, meaning Big River, that ultimately gave the river its present-day name. European explorers reached the mouth of the river as early as the 16th century and 17th century. The river throughout history has served as the border for New France, New Spain, and the early United States—its size and importance made it a formidable boundary as well as a strategic military location, and later, an important artery for steamboats to travel on. Writer Mark Twain was one of the most well-known figures on the river in this period. Even today, the river serves as partial boundaries for ten states, and most of its course can easily be seen on a political map. The Mississippi has also been known for great flooding events, especially in the 20th century which experienced up to four 100-year floods. This has led to the construction of hundreds of miles of levees along nearly the entire course of the river, although they have not always succeeded in preventing the greatest floods. Throughout its history, whether for Native Americans, explorers, or modern commerce, the Mississippi has always been a major navigation route through the center of North America. In the 19th and 20th centuries, despite its slow current and relative depth, a series of dams were constructed on the river, one of the most notable of which is at St. Anthony Falls in Minneapolis. These dams facilitate navigation for a steady stream of barge traffic carrying agricultural products from the fertile Mississippi Basin to the Gulf Coast, and like the Columbia River, most of the upper Mississippi is a cascade of reservoirs, as are many of its tributaries like the
Duration : 0:1:21