Texas, flash flooding
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Live: Guadalupe River flooding death toll rises to 84. Staff reports, San Antonio Express-News. Camp Mystic has confirmed the deaths of 27 campers and counselors in the July Fourth flood.
Live: Guadalupe River flooding death toll rises to 84 Staff reports, San Antonio Express-News Camp Mystic has confirmed the deaths of 27 campers and counselors in the July Fourth flood.
Live: Guadalupe River flooding death toll rises to 84. Staff reports, San Antonio Express-News. Camp Mystic has confirmed the deaths of 27 campers and counselors in the July Fourth flood.
The Guadalupe River in Texas surged 26 feet in just 45 minutes. No one saw it coming - What began as a routine flood developed into a deadly disaster, with the death toll now in triple digits
Multiple parts of Central Texas, including Kerr County, were shocked by flash floods Friday when the Guadalupe River and others rose rapidly.
Days after flash floods killed over 100 people during the July Fourth weekend, search-and-rescue teams are using heavy equipment to untangle and peel away layers of trees, unearth large rocks in riverbanks and move massive piles of debris that stretch for miles in the search for the missing people.
Officials in flood-stricken central Texas on Wednesday again deflected mounting questions about whether they could have done more to warn people ahead of devastating flash flooding that killed at least 119 people on July 4.
The threat of heavy rain is “slight” for this weekend, but with the ground fully saturated in Kerr County even small amounts of rainfall could cause flooding.