More
than 370,000 people in Florida were ordered to evacuate but officials
believe many ignored the warning.
Governor
Scott said the US Coast Guard carried out 10 missions overnight,
saving at least 27 people.
Michael
ploughed into Florida's Panhandle coast on Wednesday, one of the
strongest storms to ever hit the US mainland.
Ranked
four on the five-step Saffir-Simpson scale and with a storm surge of
2.7m, it lifted homes from their foundations and heavily damaged
others in districts closest to the sea in Mexico Beach, CNN
helicopter footage showed.
Twenty
survivors were found in the town overnight, AP reports, but 285 had
refused to obey warnings to evacuate.
Head
of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, Brock Long, called Mexico
Beach "ground zero" due to the damage.
Trees
were downed in Panama City buildings flattened, boats and electrical
cables scattered.
Apalachicola,
with 2300 residents, was also badly affected, the mayor reporting
that downed cables were making it difficult to get through the town.
Debris
and floodwater are also making some of the worst-hit areas difficult
to reach.
Mr
Scott urged residents not to return until the authorities "make
sure things are safe", given the danger from power lines and
other debris.
Six
deaths have been confirmed - four in Florida, one in Georgia and one
in North Carolina.
Florida
officials say one man died when he was crushed in an incident
involving a tree in Gadsden County.
In
Seminole County, Georgia, a metal car-shelter lifted by a gust of
wind hit a mobile home, killing a girl of 11.
Travis
Brooks, director of Seminole County's emergency management agency,
told ABC News there was "complete and total devastation".
A man works though the remains of an apartment in the aftermath of Hurricane Michael.Photo:AFP
Michael
earlier reportedly killed at least 13 people as it passed through
Central America: six in Honduras, four in Nicaragua and three in El
Salvador.
Winds
have knocked out power to more than 900,000 homes and businesses
across Florida, Alabama, the Carolinas and Georgia.
Around
6000 are thought to have sought refuge in official shelters, mainly
in Florida.
With
reduced winds of 50mph, according to the National Hurricane Center
(NHC), Michael has moved north-east crossing Georgia and is closing
in on Greensboro, North Carolina.
The
NHC warned that communities in north-west Florida and North Carolina
faced the threat of life-threatening flooding as rising water moved
inland from the coast.
The
Carolinas are still recovering from the floods of Hurricane Florence.
States
of emergency have been declared in all or parts of Florida, Alabama,
Georgia and North Carolina.
-BBC
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