distinct, separate low-lying areas (where flooding one does not necessarily mean flooding another) protected by levees. More central NO is in a different area (bowl) than some of the more eastern areas.
Here is a map that shows (some of) the eastern area:
http://www.mvn.usace.army.mil.nyud.net:8090/pao/response/chalmette.asp(Oh, the picture shows only some of the levees, specifically those for hurricane protection of this small eastern area. But if you imagine in the levees along the Mississippi, it gives a decent idea of one "bowl".)
Here is a better map:
http://www.kathryncramer.com.nyud.net:8090/./photos/uncategorized/map.jpgWith Katrina, some levees protecting the eastern area were basically overwhelmed (from Lake Borgne), while more central NO was effected by breaches that probably shouldn't have occurred. (Best data that I have at the moment.)
Most of the "reporting talent" (wherever it is found) has little or no idea of what they are talking about, and some on the administration side are trying to obscure important distinctions in order (to try) to support the "category four storm, levees -- never designed to meet this -- were overwhelmed" line that spins the damage as a no-fault situation, whereas much of the damage apparently resulted from (private contractor) work that wasn't up to specification (real shocker there). (The full category four effects were not felt in NO, and the levees protecting the more central areas should not have failed. -- Again, best data.)
Personally, at this time, I am waiting for some reliable information before trying to place the current data stream into context, separate it into fact and fiction, etc.
Here is a decent article that talks about Katrina damage. Hopefully, we will get similar data when this storm has passed... but I ain't countin' on it.
(The article doesn't seem to talk much about a barge(s) ramming levees and breaching them.)