Southeast Missouri / Lead Belt / Mississippi Corridor
The Mississippi River and Apple Creek bottoms drive flood-zone questions
Perry County's eastern edge is the Mississippi River and its bottoms, and Apple Creek drains part of the county, so flood-zone status is a real factor for low-lying property.
Perry County’s eastern boundary is the Mississippi River, and the river bottoms along with the Apple Creek drainage put parts of the county in mapped floodplain. For anyone buying, building, or insuring property on low ground near the river or the creek, the practical step is to check a specific parcel’s flood-zone designation at the FEMA Flood Map Service Center rather than assuming a property is high and dry. Flood-zone status affects insurance requirements and what can be built where. Missouri’s Department of Natural Resources provides state floodplain-management context, and county emergency management is the local anchor for past events and current rules. Avoid relying on current river-stage readings, which change constantly; the durable question is where a parcel sits relative to the mapped floodplain. Levee or drainage districts may exist in the bottoms and are worth confirming for any specific tract.
References
Where this fits: this note belongs to Perry County. See every local note for the county on its page.