Texas, the flooding and satellite images
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Texas, Camp Mystic and flash flood
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Trump Lands in Texas to Survey Flood Damage
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The legendary Lone Star singer-songwriter's two daughters attended Camp Mystic, where 27 campers and counselors died and nearly a dozen are still missing.
Heavy equipment is tearing through massive debris piles in Kerr County as the search for the missing continues.
The devastating floods that swept through the Texas Hill Country on July Fourth weekend have claimed more than 100 lives, including young campers whose lives were cut tragically short, with dozens still missing.
Heavy rain poured over parts of central Texas, dumping more than a month's worth of rain for places like San Angelo.
The 1978 deluge began when remnants of a tropical storm crossed the Gulf of Mexico and entered Texas north of Brownsville. When it was over, 33 were dead.
Search and rescue operations are ongoing after flash floods hit parts of Texas. An unknown number of people still remain missing.
The record of frequent, often deadly floods in Central Texas goes back more than 200 years to July 1819, when floodwaters spilled into the major plazas of San Antonio. That city on the edge of the Hill Country was hit by major floods again in 1913, 1921, 1998 and 2025, to cite a few examples.