Ranked among the top ten states for both disasters and dry climate, Colorado has a long history of extreme weather. On May 19, 1864, residents of the fledgling gold rush town of Denver awoke to a wall of water slamming into the city with enough force to flatten buildings and rip clothing from its victims. The infamous Big Thompson Canyon flood of 1976 killed 144 residents, tourists and campers. Per the National Center for Atmospheric Research, Coloradoans experienced twenty-two floods with contemporary monetary losses of $2 million or more since the flood of 1864. And as the population continues to grow, the loss of lives, property, crops and livestock may increase. Local author Darla Sue Dollman, who witnessed and survived many of the contemporary disasters, examines the state's most catastrophic flash floods from 1864 to 2013.
Kom i gang med denne boken i dag for 0 kr
- Få full tilgang til alle bøkene i appen i prøveperioden
- Ingen forpliktelser, si opp når du vil
Forfatter:
Serie:
DisasterSpråk:
engelsk
Format:

Southwest Virginia and Maritime Disasters : From The SS Vestris to the Morro Castle and Beyond
Brandon Whited
book
The 1967 Belvidere Tornado
Mike Doyle
book
Hurricane Destruction in South Carolina : Hell and High Water
Tom Rubillo
book
The Nebraska Winter of 1948-49 : Stories of Survival
Barry Seegebarth
book
Wreck of the Faithful Steward on Delaware's False Cape, The
Michael Dougherty
book
The Hulett Hotel Fire on Lake George
George T. Kapusinski
book
Disaster on Lake Erie : The 1841 Wreck of the Steamship Erie
Alvin F. Oickle
book
The Cedar Keys Hurricane of 1896: Disaster at Dawn
Alvin F. Oickle
book
Island in the Storm : Sullivan's Island and Hurricane Hugo
Jamie W. Moore, Dorothy Perrin Moore
book
Cape Cod and the Portland Gale of 1898
Donald Wilding
book
Disaster in Lawrence : The Fall of the Pemberton Mill
Alvin F. Oickle
book
Yellow Fever on Galveston Island
Jan Johnson
book
