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Texas Hill Country saw $1.1 billion in property damage to residential buildings, according to preliminary Cotality estimates.
New analysis highlights where the most residential structures were located during the deadly Texas flash flooding.
New analysis highlights where the most residential structures were located during the deadly Texas flash flooding.
Flooding is getting more frequent, extreme, and hard to predict—and most of us are dangerously unaware of its risks.
Understanding the combination of meteorological, geomorphological and hydrological factors that led to the Texas flood could ...
New York, North Carolina, New Mexico and Texas have all suffered serious flooding this month. Climate change is causing even ...
The floods in Texas were particularly devastating: more than 130 deaths, 101 people still missing, and an estimated $18 billion to $22 billion in damage. Those were followed by floods in North ...
The July 4 Texas Hill Country flash flooding event is the latest to hit the region known as “Flash Flood Alley,” as Texas ...
Many states, including Texas, have not used billions of dollars from FEMA intended to reduce damage from flooding and other ...
The first State Flood Plan, published last year, identified $54 billion in flood mitigation, warning and data needs. The ...
The risk of the catastrophic flooding that struck Texas Hill Country as people slept on July 4 and left at least 120 dead was ...
Q: Is it true that if President Donald Trump hadn’t defunded the National Weather Service, the death toll in the Texas ...
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