The most noticeably awful feelings of trepidation of flooding are beginning to be acknowledged with Harvey as it empties probably the most extraordinary precipitation Houston and different parts of Southeast Texas has ever seen. What's more, substantially more rain is still to come.
"Disastrous flooding in the Houston metropolitan zone is relied upon to decline," the National Weather Service said Sunday morning.
One to two feet of rain has officially fallen with a few areas nearing 30 inches.
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The Weather Service office in Houston detailed 24.1 crawls of rain in 24 hours starting at 7 a.m. Sunday morning and said this August had turned into the wettest month in written history because of the tempest.
It included the "lion's share" of streams and sounds around Houston were at record levels. Some were surpassing past records by 10 feet.
"Volume-wise, this has loved achieved the precipitation that fell amid Allison in June 2001, and it keeps on drizzling," said the Weather Service office in College Park, Md., in charge of precipitation estimates.Read More
| Floodwater flows in a river in Houston, as rains brought by Hurricane Harvey continue |
"Disastrous flooding in the Houston metropolitan zone is relied upon to decline," the National Weather Service said Sunday morning.
One to two feet of rain has officially fallen with a few areas nearing 30 inches.
See Also
Hurricane Harvey to Create ‘Multiday Rainfall Disaster’
"I know beyond a shadow of a doubt this is the most noticeably bad surge Houston has ever experienced," Patrick Blood, National Weather Service meteorologist, told the Houston Chronicle.The Weather Service office in Houston detailed 24.1 crawls of rain in 24 hours starting at 7 a.m. Sunday morning and said this August had turned into the wettest month in written history because of the tempest.
It included the "lion's share" of streams and sounds around Houston were at record levels. Some were surpassing past records by 10 feet.
"Volume-wise, this has loved achieved the precipitation that fell amid Allison in June 2001, and it keeps on drizzling," said the Weather Service office in College Park, Md., in charge of precipitation estimates.Read More
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