Texas, flooding
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Heavy rains fell quickly in the predawn hours of Friday in the Texas Hill Country, causing the Guadalupe River to rise 26 feet in just 45 minutes.
Unfounded rumors linking an extreme weather event to human attempts at weather modification are again spreading on social media. It is not plausible that available weather modification techniques caused or influenced the July 4 flash flooding along the Guadalupe River in Texas.
FOX 26 Houston on MSN13d
Texas flooding explainedFOX 26 meteorologist Remiesha Shade takes a look at what caused the devastating flooding in Central Texas over the weekend and when they could finally see some relief.
More than 30 million people at risk of flash flooding just weeks after deadly Texas floods - As many as 13 inches of rain could fall around Ohio, Illinois and other states in the coming days
While looking into Birmingham, Alabama, chief meteorologist James Spann ‘s new weather network, we saw that he felt compelled to get on social media recently to explain away conspiracy theories surrounding the deadly Texas floods that killed more than 100 people earlier this month.
This is false. It is not possible that cloud seeding generated the floods, according to experts, as the process can only produce limited precipitation using clouds that already exist.
'Hope is not a plan': Texas meteorologist talks the forecast preceding the deadly Hill Country flood
Renowned Texas meteorologist Troy Kimmel spoke on Inside Texas Politics about the forecast preceding the deadly flooding in the Hill Country.
Bob Canales said he tried to save the family before they were overwhelmed by the floodwaters that killed at least 132 people
4don MSN
KERRVILLE, Texas (AP) — Rescue crews in Texas kept a wary eye on river levels Monday, hoping to resume the search for people still missing from catastrophic flooding that pummeled the central part of the state earlier this month and killed at least 132 people.
Click through to see maps that explain how those historic floods happened. Elizabeth Conley/Staff The map shows a satellite-based estimate of rainfall over Texas on April 15-18, 2016.