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China Floods Take More Lives As River Dykes Threatened

Eighteen floodgates are opened at the Three Gorges dam, 22 July 2007 in Yichang, in central China's Hubei province, to release flood waters approaching the warning level line. China's death toll from natural disasters this year topped 700 by mid-July, with about half the fatalities coming this month, and at least 129 missing, Xinhua said, as millions have been evacuated or seen their homes flooded or destroyed. Photo courtesy AFP.

Mudslide kills 27 in China
Beijing (AFP) July 20 - Pelting rain in southwest China triggered a mudslide that buried 27 workers alive, the latest in a series of downpours that have claimed hundreds of lives this rainy season, state press reported Friday. The deaths occurred in Yunnan province, where 74 workers living in tents near a dam were swept away by the mudslide early Thursday, Xinhua news agency said. A disaster team was searching for two missing labourers, the report said, adding that an unspecified number were injured. Flooding and landslides had killed 360 people this year through July 2, when the rainy season officially began, according to the flood headquarters. Nearly that amount have been killed since during several weeks of intense rain and flooding across the country, according to officials and media reports.

by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) July 22, 2007
Another 74 people have died in floods across China bringing the death toll for the week to at least 156 in one of the deadliest rainy seasons in years, state media reported Sunday. The latest reported deaths from heavy rains that have spread misery across much of the country included dozens killed in recent days in the mountainous southwestern province of Yunnan, the Xinhua news agency said.

Torrential downpours in the region triggered mudslides, landslides and heavy flooding that also destroyed more than 4,000 homes and ravaged crops, it said.

The Yunnan death toll rose to 65 with reports Sunday of six more deaths.

Four of those were mine workers in Tengchong county who were engulfed by a sudden landslide on Saturday while trying to clear up mud debris loosed by earlier rains.

Two others came as rescuers on Sunday found the bodies of a pair of migrant workers missing in a landslide that swept through their work site on Thursday.

The two bodies bring the toll from that landslide to 29.

At least another eight people have been reported missing in the province.

Mud and rockslides also closed the 176-kilometre (109-mile) Tengchong-Myitkyina highway linking China and Burma.

In far-western Xinjiang province, nine people have been confirmed killed by floods, with two more missing, Xinhua said.

Weeks of torrential rains in several provinces have made this year's summer rainy season one of the deadliest in years.

Meanwhile, flood-control officials in eastern Anhui province warned that water levels in the surging Huaihe River, China's third-longest, could remain dangerously high for at least another 10 days.

Dykes along the river have soaked for three weeks in the highest water levels since 1991, putting them at increased risk of breaching with more rain expected, Xinhua quoted officials as saying.

More than one million people have been evacuated in Henan, Anhui and Jiangsu provinces along the river's course, Xinhua said.

This past week has been especially deadly in China, with at least 40 killed and nine missing in eastern Shandong province and 42 dead, 12 missing in the southwestern Chongqing region following record-smashing downpours in both areas.

China's death toll from natural disasters this year topped 700 by mid-July, with about half the fatalities coming this month, and at least 129 missing, Xinhua said on Friday.

Millions have been evacuated or seen their homes flooded or destroyed.

Source: Agence France-Presse

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Catastrophic Flooding Changes The Course Of British History
London UK (SPX) Jul 19, 2007
A catastrophic megaflood separated Britain from France hundreds of thousands of years ago, changing the course of British history, according to research published in the journal Nature today. The study, led by Sanjeev Gupta and Jenny Collier from Imperial College London, has revealed spectacular images of a huge valley tens of kilometres wide and up to 50 metres deep carved into chalk bedrock on the floor of the English Channel.







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