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User:Runningonbrains/Big Thompson Flood

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1976 Big Thompson Flood
Sign in the Viestenz-Smith Park, demonstrating the maximum height of the flood
DateJuly 31, 1976
LocationBig Thompson River Canyon, Larimer County, Colorado
Deaths143
Property damage$35 million (1977 dollars)

On July 31, 1976, during the celebration of Colorado's centennial, the Big Thompson Canyon was the site of a devastating flash flood that swept down the steep and narrow canyon, claiming the lives of 143 people, 5 of whom were never found. This flood was triggered by a nearly stationary thunderstorm near the upper section of the canyon that dumped 300 millimeters (12 inches) of rain in less than 4 hours (more than 3/4 of the average annual rainfall for the area). Little rain fell over the lower section of the canyon, where many of the victims were.[citation needed]

The flood was the deadliest natural disaster in Colorado's history.[1]

Around 9 p.m., a wall of water more than 6 meters (20 ft) high raced down the canyon at about 6 m/s (14 mph), destroying 400 cars, 418 houses and 52 businesses and washing out most of U.S. Route 34.[2] This flood was more than 4 times as strong as any in the 112-year record available in 1976, with a discharge of 1,000 cubic meters per second (35,000 ft³/s).[citation needed]

The flood spurred many advancements in public warnings for flash flooding in the United States.[3]

In 2008, a man who was thought to have died in the flood was found to be alive and living in Oklahoma. Daryle Johnson and his family had rented a cabin east of Estes Park, but left without telling anyone on the morning of July 31. A woman who was researching the flood's victims discovered he was still alive.[4]

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