You can get this news if you follow a "weather site" - otherwise out of the headlines. Forget about the Big Picture
Genoa, Italy and Nimes, France Swamped By Flash Flooding; One Dead
Heavy
rainfall sent floodwaters rushing through parts of northern Italy and
southern France Thursday into Friday, swamping buildings, trapping
vehicles and killing at least one.
Flooding
swamped city streets in the northern Italian coastal city of Genoa
(population about 600,000) Thursday night. Numerous
vehicles were trapped by water up to windshields,
then floated, and piled into and on top of each other once the
floodwaters subsided.
A
57-year-old man was killed in Genoa after being swept away in
floodwaters, according to Reuters. Streets were left covered in mud
after the water receded. A retaining
wall collapsed and
forced the evacuation of 16 families and a few mudslides were
reported on several major highways, according to Italian news
site Primocanale.it.
More
than 7 inches of rain fell in Genoa in a three-day period ending
Friday morning, local time. However, Thursday into early Friday,
alone, 7-12 inches of rain had fallen in the Apennine Mountains north
of the city, helping to push the Bisagno River well out of its
banks.
A man
enters his partially-buried car, on October 10, 2014 in Nimes,
after heavy showers led to flash floods. (BORIS HORVAT/AFP/Getty
Images)
For the third time in just over a week, flash floods swamped parts of southeast France on Thursday and Friday. Particularly hard hit was the Gard department, including the city of Nimes.
Schools
were closed and residents were urged to avoid travel due to rising
water.
At
least 40
people were rescued by
firefighters as floodwaters rose in Gard, ten of those by helicopter,
according to French language news site Le Figaro.
Meteo
France issued a red alert for flooding in the Gard through Sunday.
According
to Meteo France, roughly 2 feet (600 millimeters) of rain has fallen
in the hills north of the flood-weary city of Montpellier, France
since the beginning of September.
Upper-air
pattern responsible for the early-mid October 2014 flooding in the
south of France and northern Italy.
The recent flooding can be blamed on a stagnant weather pattern.
A
southward dip in the jet stream, with its attendant upper-level lows
has been stuck over Scotland, Ireland, and the eastern Atlantic Ocean
off the Iberian Peninsula for several days.
This
has allowed ample moisture to flow northward into Spain, Portugal,
France and Italy, southern Germany, eastward even into the Baltics
and western Russia.
Moisture
values in the atmosphere in these areas were two to four standard
deviations above the mid-October average.
Instead
of cold fronts sweeping east across Europe, this humid atmosphere has
remained in place. When a jet stream disturbance helps ignite
thunderstorms, they have tended to form in slow-moving, bands with
cells training like boxcars of a train over the same area.
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