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California towns cut off by floods
by Staff Writers
Los Angeles (AFP) Feb 28, 2019

Two California towns have been turned into islands as a river swollen to its highest level in a quarter century flooded some 2,000 homes and forced evacuations.

The record-breaking floodwaters from the Russian River on Wednesday cut off the wine-country towns of Monte Rio and Guerneville, located in northern California.

"Guerneville is land locked. You cannot get into or out of town," the Sonoma County Sheriff's Office said.

"Guerneville is officially an island."

Residents of the town, many of whom ignored orders to evacuate, were forced to use kayaks and canoes to ride out the flood waters -- some as high as eight feet.

The water was slowly receding on Thursday but the sheriff's office said access to the town would not be possible for up to two days.

The National Guard was called in to help as some people got trapped by mudslides or the rising waters.

The National Weather Service said another storm was set to hammer the region this weekend with heavy rain and mountain snow expected on Saturday.

California has had one of the wettest and coldest winters in years with conditions made worse in areas scorched by fires and prone to dangerous mudslides.


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SHAKE AND BLOW
Fears flood water runoff could 'smother' Barrier Reef
Sydney (AFP) Feb 15, 2019
Runoff from recent floods in northern Australia is flowing onto parts of the Barrier Reef, scientists said Friday, starving coral of light and providing fodder for the predatory crown-of-thorns starfish. Parts of northern Queensland are still reeling after nearly two weeks of unprecedented rainfall that turned roads into rivers and inundated hundreds of homes with floodwater. Scientists at James Cook University say the floods swelled a number of rivers along hundreds of kilometres of coastline, ... read more

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