Climate change is real.
Torrents drench Denver as Death Valley recovers from 1,000-year delugehttps://t.co/KpYXg2jf32
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) August 8, 2022
In chest deep water – Denver firefighters rescued multiple children, including a baby, stuck in flood waters.
— Kelly Reinke (@KellyReinkeTV) August 8, 2022
Man who gave me this video (Felix Espinoza) says this was at 38th and Blake. He says family told him they were coming back from dinner, and the pizza was saved too. pic.twitter.com/qSs5pqEl9N
At least 19 people rescued in Denver, Colorado, after flash floods turned roadways into rivers. https://t.co/MvPPGPGN8E
— NBC News (@NBCNews) August 8, 2022
Flash floods after the McKinney fire in California pushed burned soil, rocks and timber into the Klamath River, killing thousands of fish, local tribal leaders said.
— The New York Times (@nytimes) August 8, 2022
“It smells vile,” a member of the Karuk Tribe said. “If it was in that river, it died.” https://t.co/764fUze9yL
NEW from me — Death Valley flooding traps at least 1,000 in California national park https://t.co/KEw4Eamz00
— Herb Scribner (@HerbScribner) August 6, 2022
Intense downpours in Missouri, Kentucky and Illinois over a span of eight days this summer broke records and destroyed communities, prompting warnings from climate experts, who said the intensity and frequency of heavy rain was likely to increase. https://t.co/PJt5qz1PSm pic.twitter.com/X8YHrzs4sO
— The New York Times (@nytimes) August 5, 2022