At least 51 dead in Texas floods, with dozens still missing

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ASPartOfMe
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06 Jul 2025, 2:44 am

NBC News Live Updates

Quote:
FLASH FLOODING: Catastrophic flooding struck central Texas yesterday, causing the Guadalupe River near Kerrville to surge by more than 20-26 feet within 90 minutes, leading to widespread damage and road washouts.

DOZENS KILLED: The death toll rose to 51 people across five counties tonight. In Kerr County, officials reported 43 deaths — 28 adults and 15 children.

DOZENS MISSING FROM CAMP: Some families have begun identifying campers who were killed in the flooding. Officials said this morning the tally of children missing from Camp Mystic stood at 27.



How weather conditions set the stage for the deadly Texas flash floods
Quote:
Incredible amounts of moisture in the air fueled a storm that moved slowly and dumped rain over central Texas, creating conditions for fatal flash floods in the early morning hours when it was easy to catch people by surprise, meteorologists said.

More than 12 inches (30 centimeters) of rain fell in the Texas Hill Country over a span of several hours early Friday, causing water levels to quickly rise, according to the weather forecasting company AccuWeather. The area is naturally prone to flash flooding, but this was an especially bad storm that hit during the vulnerable overnight hours, experts said.

Meteorologists said that an atmosphere warmed by human-caused climate change can hold more moisture and allow bad storms to dump more rain, though it’s hard to connect specific storms to a warming planet so soon after they occur.

“In a warming climate we know that the atmosphere has more moisture to give, to hold on to and then to release. But also the thing that we know about climate change is that our rain events are not as uniform as what they used to be,” said Shel Winkley, a meteorologist with Climate Central. “So, you’ll get these big rain events happening in localized areas, tapping into the historic level of moisture in the atmosphere.”

In recent weeks, flash flooding driven by bursts of heavy rain turned deadly elsewhere in Texas and in West Virginia. In San Antonio in June, more than 7 inches (18 centimeters) of rain fell over a span of hours, prompting dozens of rescues from the fast-rising floodwaters and killing at least 13. And in West Virginia that month, at least nine people died when as much as 4 inches (10 centimeters) of rain fell within 40 minutes and caused flash flooding in the Wheeling area.

Robert Henson, a meteorologist and writer with Yale Climate Connections, said this latest Texas rain storm was roughly a once-in-a-generation event. It fell in the Texas Hill Country where water quickly shoots down rugged hills into narrow river basins that swell quickly.

“As is often the case with the worst disasters, many things came together in a terrible way.” Henson said.

Plus, the area had been in a drought, so the water ran down the dry, hard land fast. That made it more dangerous for children attending camp.

“A sudden surge of rain like that is going to have a harder time getting absorbed,” said Brett Anderson, a senior meteorologist at AccuWeather. “It just runs right off of it. It’s like concrete.”

The sheer amount of rain was overwhelming. Former NOAA chief scientist Ryan Maue, a private meteorologist, calculated Saturday morning that the storm had dropped 120 billion gallons of water on Kerr County, which received the brunt of the storm.

A storm with plenty of fuel
Moisture fueled the storm from many directions. Tropical Storm Barry formed briefly last weekend, moving over Mexico and then its remnants continued up into Texas. But the jet stream, a current of air that moves weather patterns, wasn’t there to push that moisture away.

“Normally weather systems and the remnants of tropical systems will get picked up by the jet stream, and that’s just not over Texas currently,” said Winkley, the Climate Central meteorologist. “It’s essentially a weather system without a road to get away from the Lone Star State.”

The warm water of the Gulf fueled the moist atmosphere. Even more moisture came from areas over the Pacific Ocean to the west. The combination gave the storm plenty of fuel once it got started.

Generally a warmer atmosphere can hold more moisture, creating conditions for storms to drop more rain.

“With climate change we have a warming atmosphere. A warmer atmosphere holds a lot more moisture, and we are seeing obviously much more total atmospheric moisture across the globe in recent years than we normally have,” said Anderson, the AccuWeather meteorologist.


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07 Jul 2025, 7:55 am

My husband told me last night that this happened before! In 1987! The same river, with campgrounds!



Why, oh why, didn't they learn from this and put the campgrounds higher? So many more people died this time!

I am hydrophobic anyway, but this disaster really bothered me. Even way over here on the other side of the country. Those poor people.



BTDT
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07 Jul 2025, 9:25 am

It sounds a lot like where I used to work.
While it looks like a lot of stuff is automated, a lot actually depended on manual intervention of staff member for duty to happen. I supported a monthly forecast by remembering to download and edit stuff for public consumption. If I forgot the forecast didn't happen. It was a legacy function of the organization that got taken out of the monthly magazine and didn't go away until my manager used Covid as an excuse.

When a long time employee retired or died that was an opportunity to stop supporting stuff.

A lot of web stuff only did the most popular 90% You had to call for help with remaining 10%

Perhaps it should have been automated under the previous administration but instead they just fired the people who did that.



cyberdora
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07 Jul 2025, 5:42 pm

Also becoming a regular occurrence in regional Australia. Flash floods, fires, cyclones and storms. Not so much the weather events themselves but the extreme severity is what's changed.

Condolences to Texans who have lost family.



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08 Jul 2025, 1:28 am

Must be the time difference but we are getting minute by minute updates, the death toll has now surpassed 100.



cyberdora
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09 Jul 2025, 4:56 am

Much like Hurricane Katrina did in Louisiana, the current floods are exposing deep fault lines in American society

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/202 ... ician-maga
https://www.yahoo.com/news/far-left-act ... 51717.html

I was interested in Sadie Perkins comments. terribly poor empathy for the victims in order to highlight segregation in Texas.