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Extremely low Mississippi River levels just reemerged a 'once in a lifetime' tourist destination in Missouri for the third year in a row

Human-driven climate change, through the burning of fossil fuels like coal, oil, and gas, has made the once-rare event all too common.

GRAND TOWER, Ill. — Tourists in 2022 flocked to Southern Missouri for what they thought would be a "once-in-a-lifetime" tourist destination. As of Sunday morning, Tower Rock reemerged from the depths of the Mississippi River for the third year in a row.

The aptly named towering rock formation usually sits isolated in the Mississippi River around 100 miles south of St. Louis. It's normally separated from the bank of the river, but low water levels in 2022 exposed a rock walkway to the destination.

Mississippi River levels at Chester, Illinois, dipped below 1.5 feet early Sunday morning, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's National Water Prediction Service. Once water levels dip that low, the path to Tower Rock washes up.

Click here to see the National Weather Prediction Center's forecast for how long the area's river levels are expected to stay under 1.5 feet.

5 On Your Side was warned in 2022 about this "once-in-a-lifetime" event becoming all too common by then-American Rivers representative Olivia Dorothy. She said annual low river levels are something Missourians and all residents along the Mississippi should get accustomed to as human-induced climate change through the burning of fossil fuels like coal, oil, and gas make these conditions more common.

“This is the new normal,” Dorothy said in 2022. “Climate models have predicted that this region will shift to being prone to very long and dramatic droughts that will be punctuated by extreme fluctuation and flooding.”

The U.N. weather agency recently reported that 2023 was the driest year in more than three decades for the world's rivers, including the Mississippi River, as the record-hot year underpinned a drying up of water flows and contributed to prolonged droughts in some places.

The data for 2024 isn’t in yet, but the agency said the extremely hot summer is “very likely” to translate into low river flows this year, and “in many parts of the world, we expect more water scarcity.”

READ MORE: The world's rivers faced the driest year in three decades in 2023, the UN weather agency says

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