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Author Topic: Scores missing in tsunami-like flood in Australia  (Read 2230 times)

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Offline zuluwarrior

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Scores missing in tsunami-like flood in Australia
« on: January 11, 2011, 05:57:47 AM »
Scores missing in tsunami-like flood in Australia
By KRISTEN GELINEAU and TERTIUS PICKARD Associated Press © 2011 The Associated Press
Jan. 11, 2011, 5:29AM
Share Del.icio.usDiggTwitterYahoo! BuzzFacebookStumbleUponEmail Close [X]BRISBANE, Australia — Greg Kowald was driving through the center of Toowoomba when a terrifying, tsunami-like wall of water roared through the streets of the northeast Australian city.

Office windows exploded, cars careened into trees and bobbed in the churning brown water like corks. The deluge washed away bridges and sidewalks; people desperately clung to power poles to survive. Before it was over, the flash flood left at least 10 dead and 78 missing.

"The water was literally leaping, six or 10 feet into the air, through creeks and over bridges and into parks," Kowald, a 53-year-old musician, told The Associated Press on Tuesday. "There was nowhere to escape, even if there had been warnings. There was just a sea of water about a kilometer (half a mile) wide."

The violent surge in Toowoomba brought the overall death toll from weeks of flooding in Queensland state to 20, a sudden acceleration in a crisis that had been unfolding gradually with swollen rivers overflowing their banks and inundating towns while moving toward the ocean. Queensland Premier Anna Bligh said there were "grave fears" for at least 18 of those missing.

The high waters headed next to Australia's third-largest city, Brisbane, where up to 9,000 homes were expected to be swamped. The Brisbane River overflowed its banks Tuesday and officials warned that dozens of low-lying neighborhoods and parts of downtown could be inundated in coming days.

But nothing downstream was expected to be as fierce as the flash flood that struck Toowoomba on Monday. It was sparked by a freak storm — up to 6 inches (150 millimeters) fell in half an hour.

"There was water coming down everywhere in biblical proportions," Toowoomba council member Joe Ramia told the AP.

Ramia, 63, was driving downtown when the flash flood struck. He parked his car and dashed on foot for higher ground, keeping an eye on the carnage unfolding below: Cars transformed into scrap metal as they were flung into an elevated railway line, giant metal industrial bins tossed about as if made of paper, a man clinging desperately to a power pole as the relentless tide surged around him.

Ramia watched as a rescue official pushed through the churning water and yanked the man to safety. Others, including five children, were not as lucky, and were swept to their deaths.

"You were powerless to do a thing," said Ramia, a lifelong resident of Toowoomba. "While we can rebuild, you can't replace people. ... I've never seen anything like this."

The raging water was strong enough to rip houses off their foundations. Leroy Shephard, who lives in the town of Grantham, east of Toowoomba, was inside his home when the flood struck.

"You could feel the whole house just pop up off its stumps, turn around, and go — for a 100 meters (330 feet) or something down my backyard," Shephard told Australian Broadcasting Corp.

He and his family spent five hours on the house's roof waiting for the waters to drop.

"It's not a good feeling having the floorboards under your feet just ripple, the whole house just ripple and crack, and watching rooms just disappear," he said.

Emergency services officers plucked more than 40 people from houses isolated overnight by the torrent that hit the Lockyer Valley, and thousands were being evacuated. In one small community in the path of the floodwaters, Forest Hill, the entire population of about 300 was being airlifted to safety in military helicopters, Bligh said.

Search and rescue efforts were hampered by more driving rain, though the bad weather was easing and Bligh said the search would get easier Wednesday.

Brisbane Mayor Campbell Newman said authorities were preparing for flooding affecting about 15,000 people in 80 suburbs.

The city is protected by a large dam built upstream after floods devastated downtown in 1974. But the reservoir was full, and officials had no choice but to release water that would cause low-level flooding in the city, Newman said. The alternative was a much worse torrent.

Steph Stewardson, a Brisbane graphic designer, said there was an exodus in a downtown area around lunchtime Tuesday when the river that goes through the city broke its banks. Stewardson, 40, hopped in her car and crossed the swollen river to collect her dog Boo from daycare while waters started covering the boardwalk stretching along its banks.

Stewardson took shelter in her house, and plans to stay there — for now.

"I'm about 800 meters (half a mile) from the river on a hill, so I think it's going to be OK," she told the AP.

Queensland has been in the grip of its worst flooding for more than two weeks, after tropical downpours covered an area the size of France and Germany combined. Entire towns have been swamped, more than 200,000 people affected, and the coal industry and farming have virtually shut down.

"The power of nature can still be a truly frightening power and we've seen that on display in this country," Prime Minister Julia Gillard said.

Police Commissioner Bob Atkinson described the events Monday as "an inland instant tsunami."

Forecasters said more flash floods could occur through the week.

Deputy Police Commissioner Ian Stewart said rescue efforts were concentrated on towns between Toowoomba and Brisbane, including hardest-hit Murphy's Creek and Grantham, where about 30 people sought shelter in a school isolated by the floodwaters.

The floods reached a second state Tuesday, with about 4,500 people stranded by high waters in bordering New South Wales, officials said, though the situation was not yet as dire as in Queensland.

Bligh said last week the cost of the floods could be as high as $5 billion, the latest figure available.

___

Gelineau reported from Sydney. Tanalee Smith contributed to this report from Adelaide, Australia.


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Offline Bitter

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Re: Scores missing in tsunami-like flood in Australia
« Reply #1 on: January 11, 2011, 07:43:00 AM »
<a href="http://www.youtube.com/v/c-BEMTwh4hI" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">http://www.youtube.com/v/c-BEMTwh4hI</a>
Bitter is a supercalifragilistic tic-tac-pro

Offline Dutty

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Little known fact: The online transportation medium called Uber was pioneered in Trinidad & Tobago in the 1960's. It was originally called pullin bull.

Offline Ray Agostini

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Re: Scores missing in tsunami-like flood in Australia
« Reply #3 on: January 13, 2011, 11:08:35 PM »
Only several years ago Australia was in a serious drought. Council "water police" would drive around looking for offenders watering gardens outside of restricted times, with accompanying heavy fines. Darwin in the Northern Territory is about on the same equatorial line as Trinidad (with wet and dry seasons), though the last serious cyclone (hurricane) there was in 1974 - cyclone Tracy (the most devastating cyclones have female names :) . The weather in the southern states has been pretty consistent each week: rain, showers, or possible showers most days. Temperatures can vary so much that you can start the day with a singlet and fan, and end it with a heater and jumper. 

Summers were never like this 20-30 years ago, though. I remember when it was summer - it was summer, with consistent high-range temperatures. Now, you can have summer and winter in one day. Not that I particularly mind, since the cool relief is welcome. I don't think I could ever live in the tropics again.

Queensland will be an economic and financial mess for a long time to come, and price-hikes on interstate and international exports will be inevitable. It isn't the flood that will really devastate this state, but the destroyed economy.

Offline Die_Hard

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Re: Scores missing in tsunami-like flood in Australia
« Reply #4 on: January 13, 2011, 11:14:59 PM »
No part of Australia could be on the same equatorial line as Trinidad, not meaning to nit pic, but.........

Offline Ray Agostini

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Re: Scores missing in tsunami-like flood in Australia
« Reply #5 on: January 13, 2011, 11:54:40 PM »
No part of Australia could be on the same equatorial line as Trinidad, not meaning to nit pic, but.........

Well, I'll concede that "about the same" may be an exaggeration (I didn't say "exact equatorial line").



But Darwin has wet and dry seasons (no winter), and is subject to cyclones, which the southern states are not.

Quote
Darwin has a tropical savannah climate (Köppen Aw)[18] with distinct wet and dry seasons and the average maximum temperature is similar all year round. The dry season runs from April/May to October (the southern hemisphere winter), during which nearly every day is warm and sunny, and afternoon humidity averages around 30%.[19]

There is very little rainfall between May and September. In the coolest months of June and July, the daily minimum temperature may dip as low as 14 °C (57 °F), but very rarely lower, and frost has never been recorded.

The wet season is associated with tropical cyclones and monsoon rains.[20] The majority of rainfall occurs between December and March (the southern hemisphere summer), when thunderstorms are common and afternoon relative humidity averages over 70 per cent during the wettest months.[19] It does not rain every day during the wet season, but most days are warm to hot with plentiful cloud cover; January averages under 6 hours of bright sunshine daily.

The hottest month is November, just before the onset of the main rainy season. Because of its long dry season, Darwin has the most daily average sunshine hours (8.4) of any Australian capital with the most sunshine from April to November. The sun passes directly overhead in mid October and mid February.[21] Climatically Darwin has more in common with Singapore than Sydney because it sits well inside the tropical zone.

Darwin, Northern Territory.


Offline Bakes

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Re: Scores missing in tsunami-like flood in Australia
« Reply #6 on: January 14, 2011, 12:22:40 AM »
Ray I understood your point... same distance from the equator ("same equatorial line"... just south of the equator) therefore affected by similar climate conditions.  Didn't realize that Australia extended that far north.

Offline Ray Agostini

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Re: Scores missing in tsunami-like flood in Australia
« Reply #7 on: January 14, 2011, 12:33:22 AM »
Didn't realize that Australia extended that far north.

Bake, Darwin is definitely slight cooler than Trinidad, and I'm actually Glad Die Hard pointed this out, because I need to be more accurate in my descriptions. At least the citizens of T&T don't have to look behind their back for crocodiles :) Unless things have drastically changed since I was last there.

Offline Bakes

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Re: Scores missing in tsunami-like flood in Australia
« Reply #8 on: January 14, 2011, 01:56:45 AM »
Didn't realize that Australia extended that far north.

Bake, Darwin is definitely slight cooler than Trinidad, and I'm actually Glad Die Hard pointed this out, because I need to be more accurate in my descriptions. At least the citizens of T&T don't have to look behind their back for crocodiles :) Unless things have drastically changed since I was last there.

Oye vey... yeah, if it's one thing I fraid about Oz is allyuh 'exotic' collection of deadly animals.

Offline Ray Agostini

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Re: Scores missing in tsunami-like flood in Australia
« Reply #9 on: January 20, 2011, 10:31:55 PM »
Queensland faces financial ruin. Insurers say no to Brisbane flood victims.

Earlier I posted:

Quote
Queensland will be an economic and financial mess for a long time to come, and price-hikes on interstate and international exports will be inevitable. It isn't the flood that will really devastate this state, but the destroyed economy.

Have a good day, and spare a thought for the victims of greed. It's a universal problem.

 

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