The Columbus Dispatch

Rivers rise as floods lay siege to Carolinas

- By Jason Samenow

Under calm blue skies, eight days after Florence’s final drops rained down, parts of northeast South Carolina and southeast North Carolina are experienci­ng devastatin­g flooding from the departed hurricane. Entire communitie­s are underwater, and some rivers continue to rise.

Conway, South Carolina, which is about 15 miles northwest of Myrtle Beach, saw some of the most severe flooding Monday. The Waccamaw River rose to a record high level and isn’t expected to crest until Wednesday, more than 4 feet above its previous high mark.

This “underscore­s why long-lived, significan­t flood events can cause so much human suffering,” tweeted Taylor Trogdon, a hurricane specialist at the National Center for Atmospheri­c Research. “Hurricane Florence made landfall on September 14th, 10 days ago, and the Waccamaw River near Conway hasn’t crested yet, remaining in record stage.”

The National Weather Service said the river level would crest 2 feet higher than it did during Hurricanes Matthew in 2016 and Floyd in 1999.

“This particular event is extremely uncommon,” Frank Alsheimer, the science and operations officer at the National Weather Service’s office in Columbia, South Carolina, told Earther.com, a website that reports on the Shawn Lowrimore wades into the Waccamaw River on Monday near the Fellowship With Jesus Ministries church in Yauhannah, S.C. The river is already higher than its record crest and is expected to keep rising for several days.

environmen­t.

“We’re talking about unpreceden­ted levels we haven’t seen before,” Alsheimer said, “and because of that, we’re going to have a lot of personal suffering of people who live in areas that were never flooded before but will be flooded because of this event.”

Video footage showed vast areas, including entire residentia­l zones, covered in water in Conway and other parts of northeast South Carolina and southeast North Carolina.

In the Pee Dee region of northeast South Carolina, Frank Alsheimer, the science and operations officer at the National Weather Service’s office in Columbia, South Carolina

“catastroph­ic flooding” was occurring Monday, according to the South Carolina Emergency Management Division. It tweeted, “SCDOT crews are shoring up major roads as best they can. Now is not the time to be distracted by what roads may be open and what roads may be closed … we

don’t know and won’t know until they flood.”

The slow arrival of the floodwater­s is the result of the time it takes the water from swollen rivers within North Carolina’s interior to flow downstream. It’s a considerab­le distance from the interior of the Carolinas to the shore, and the terrain

flattens out along the coastal plain, which delays the drainage of water into the lowlands.

More than 40 people have died as a result of Hurricane Florence. The storm set records for rainfall from hurricanes in both North Carolina and South Carolina, unloading up to 3 feet of water. It exited the East Coast on Wednesday, but its effects are expected to linger for several more days.

Part of the former storm may head back toward the North Carolina Outer Banks, brushing the region with more rain in the middle of the week.

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