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Texas state climatologist John Nielsen-Gammon said the deadly flooding in Kerr County over July Fourth weekend was not caused ...
Kerrville resident Mary Jane Sharp found a piece of her past at the town’s flood memorial—a red chair swept away in the July 4 flood.
Climate change has made extreme rainfall more common and more intense. But many flood risk maps have yet to catch up.
Overdevelopment in flood-prone areas and inadequate mapping from the Federal Emergency Management Agency likely contributed to the tragedy that unfolded in central Texas July 4, when sudden flooding ...
In the aftermath of the 2025 Texas floods, a look back at some of the most destructive and defining flood events in the state ...
KXAN's Avery Travis and Will DuPree speak with Dr. Ogan Gurel, a physician and expert at the University of Texas at Arlington's College of Business Health Care Administration program. He talks about ...
Understanding the combination of meteorological, geomorphological and hydrological factors that led to the Texas flood could ...
From the column: "Climate-driven disasters will continue to intensify (and) we can no longer blindly rely on past experience ...
Dr. Marshall Shepherd, a renowned meteorologist and director of the University of Georgia's Atmospheric Science Program, discussed the devastating 2025 flood in Kerr County, Texas, on the podcast "The ...
A hydrologist explains why the region is known as Flash Flood Alley and how its geography and geology can lead to heavy ...
Texas leads the nation in flood-related deaths, with over 1,000 fatalities from 1959 to 2019. Factors such as geography, ...
A study puts the spotlight on Texas as the leading U.S. state by far for flood-related deaths, with more than 1,000 of them ...