One of my favorite classes a hundred years ago, taught by a guy named Reese, was Louisiana Geography. One of the many interesting subjects I enjoyed in his class was the discussion of the Army Corp of Engineers levee system and its effects, pro and con (mostly con), on S. Louisiana's coastal marshes.
The Mississippi River, before it was "tamed", swung back and forth across S. Lousiana over the eons building marshlands in its path. When the mouth of the river swung to the west, former beachheads in SW Louisiana soon became cheniers as hundreds of yards of new marsh formed in front of them from the sediment being dumped into the relatively shallow Gulf. When the river swung back to the east, a new beachhead in the form of a chenier appeared and hundreds of years later with another major flood, the river changed its course once again and the process repeated itself.
Just look at any Louisiana map and you can see the old deltas.
Today, with the river's course harnessed, most of that sediment is no longer making its way westward and is instead being dumped off the contintental shelf into deep water. I think Wax Lake Outlet is about as far west as Miss River sediment now makes it via the Morganza Spillway.
Loved that class. One of only two I didn't have to take the final.