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Tornado, floods kill at least 22 in southern US Biloxi, Mississippi (AFP) May 3, 2010 Violent thunderstorms unleashed tornados and flash floods over the southern United States over the weekend killing at least 22 people and forcing the Kentucky governor to declare a state of emergency. Governor Steve Beshear said Monday four people died in weather-related accidents in his state and requested federal assistance to deal with storm damage. "I urge individuals who encounter high waters to use extreme caution and avoid unnecessary contact with flood waters if at all possible," he said in a public alert. In Mississippi, where tornados killed 10 people nine days ago, driving rains and more tornados tore through farming regions damaging homes and destroying crops. "The month of May started off with numerous storms which caused major damage and took the lives of six people," the Mississippi Emergency Management Agency (MEMA) said in a statement, adding that reports of damage continued to roll in. MEMA spokeswoman Nikki Pressley earlier told AFP the Red Cross and Salvation Army had evacuated dozens of people from their homes to area shelters. The White House said President Barack Obama called Beshear and Tennessee Governor Phil Bredesen to extend "his deepest condolences" for the loss of life and pledge a prompt federal response to their requests for support, as they assess the damage. In Tennessee, two days of driving rain have caused widespread flooding, killing at least six people in Nashville and another six in the rest of the state, forcing scores more to evacuate homes and businesses, The Nashville Tennessean reported Monday. At least two more people were listed as missing. The newspaper said thousands of homes were flooded and entire neighborhoods submerged across the state. Late Sunday, Nashville announced that it was shutting down a water treatment plant and that a levee along the Cumberland River had begun to leak, the report said. After an aerial survey, Mayor Karl Dean said the damage was worse than he thought. "This situation is going to require a very large recovery process," the paper quotes Dean as saying. "The magnitude of the damage to our community was much more than what I expected. The safety of some of our infrastructure is questionable." Nashville fire and rescue officials were still searching late Sunday for two young men who went missing after they tried to raft in a creek with inner tubes, the daily said, adding that a third man had swum to safety. President Barack Obama Monday signed a disaster declaration for Alabama, releasing federal aid to help recovery efforts in two counties damaged by tornados and flooding, the White House said. No weather-related casualties have been reported in Alabama. The National Weather Service has forecast more severe weather for the next few days in the region, with several rivers at or near flood stage and nearby areas under flood warnings.
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Research Shows Part Of Alaska Inundated By Ancient Megafloods Tacoma WA (SPX) May 04, 2010 New research indicates that one of the largest fresh-water floods in Earth's history happened about 17,000 years ago and inundated a large area of Alaska that is now occupied in part by the city of Wasilla, widely known because of the 2008 presidential campaign. The event was one of at least four "megafloods" as Glacial Lake Atna breached ice dams and discharged water. The lake covered mor ... read more |
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