Record flooding along Alaska river near Juneau prompts evacuations
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Glacial outburst flooding happens when trapped water escapes through cracks in thinning ice dams.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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ALASKA - Record flooding struck Alaska’s capital city on Saturday after a glacial dam outburst, destroying at least one structure and prompting city officials to issue evacuation orders for residents on one street.
The National Weather Service (NWS) received reports of large trees collapsing into the Mendenhall River near Juneau on Saturday night as water levels rose, eroding the banks.
Glacial outburst flooding happens when trapped water escapes through cracks in thinning ice dams, a phenomenon that has increased around the world as a result of climate change.
The water level of Mendenhall Lake reached nearly 4.6m early Sunday morning, a rise of almost 1m over the previous record set in 2016 and 1.5m over “moderate” flood levels, according to the NWS.
Water levels were receding rapidly on the Mendenhall River in Alaska on Sunday morning, but a flood warning remained in effect until 10am local time, the NWS said.
Such extreme weather is expected to increase as a result of human-induced climate change, with scientists reporting that it played an “absolutely overwhelming” role in the record-breaking heat waves
Climate change-driven glacial melt and unusually heavy monsoon rains submerged large swathes of Pakistan in 2022, damaging crops and infrastructure and killing at least 1,700 people. REUTERS

