In the early 19th century, Breton Island comprised two islands.[2] Prior to Hurricane Opal in 1995, it was a single island, and was divided in two by that storm. After Hurricane Georges in 1998 it was divided into three islands.[3]Hurricane Ivan in 2004 caused additional damage to the island.[3]
Erosion and restoration
Breton Island decreased from 820 acres (330 ha) in 1869 to 125 acres (51 ha) in 1996.[4] Some restoration was done in 1999 funded pursuant to the Water Resources Development Act of 1992;[5] the project was put on hold in 2000.[4] Fines from the Deepwater Horizon oil spill are being used for rebuilding Breton Island.[6][7] They aim to enlarge the island to 400 acres (160 ha).
^Creef, Edward D.; Mathies, Linda G.; Hennington, Susan M. (2003). "Breton Island Restoration Project". In Garbaciak, Stephen Jr (ed.). Dredging '02: Key Technologies for Global Prosperity. pp. 1–5. doi:10.1061/40680(2003)13. ISBN978-0-7844-0680-9.