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At least 120 people across Central Texas are confirmed dead, including dozens of children who were attending the Camp Mystic summer camp, after catastrophic flooding over the Fourth of July weekend.
The National Weather Service sent alerts fast and furious. It's not clear if everyone heeded them or realized how dangerous ...
Local officials in Kerr County continue facing public scrutiny after days of seeming to deflect questions about their ...
Rain rushing to the Guadalupe took it from a depth of less than 8 feet to 37.5 feet, a deluge with as much volume as an ...
A hydrologist explains why the region is known as Flash Flood Alley and how its geography and geology can lead to heavy ...
Meteorologists say the Texas Hill Country is frequently hit with floods, although some officials and residents were caught ...
By Amy Goodman & Denis Moynihan Trump’s attack on climate action will intensify the global climate catastrophe, accelerating ...
The report stated that the top priority for saving lives during severe floods was to 'improve the delivery and effectiveness ...
• Texas flood victims: At least 150 people are known to be missing in Kerr County as a result of the flooding in central Texas, according to officials. At least a dozen others are missing in other ...
The search and rescue efforts are intensifying for more than 160 people who remain missing days after flash floods killed ...
The devastating floods that swept through the Texas Hill Country on July Fourth weekend have claimed more than 100 lives, ...
The death toll in the central Texas flooding is up to 119 people, 95 of them in Kerr County, including 36 children.