(ABOVE) Click on yellow zones to learn about susceptible area to flooding. (RIGHT) Historical photo of the devastating floods in China, 1931. The flood covered 70,000 square miles, and a Chinese committee estimated 140,000 people drowned as dikes broke. Approximately 420,000 more died of famine and disease. Crops and over 2,000,000 livestock were also lost in the devastation.
1. Southeast China

2006, July, Tropical storm Bilis leaves 150 dead in Southern China.

2005, June, Flooding in southern China in the city of Wuzhou, and the provinces of Guangxi and Guangdong, leave over 500 dead.

2004, September, Torrential rains in China cause flash floods and landslides. 143 dead.

2004, July, The worst monsoons in 10 years cause flooding and hundreds of deaths throughout South Asia.

2002, August, Lake Dong Ting, China’s second largest freshwater lake floods again. The last time Dong Ting flooded was in 1998 and over 4,000 people were killed.

2. Pacific Northwest and California

2005, January, Floods finally crested and receded in most places in the Pacific Northwest. Along with the flooding, landslides, rockslides, and mudslides occurred in Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Nevada, and California. Historical flooding peaks were reached in California, exceeding records set in 1907, 1922 and 1986.

1996, October, The Pacific Northwest is inundated with large-scale floods, that start in October, of 1996 and peak in January, 1997. Damage is estimated at over $1 Billion.

3. Mississippi & Missouri River Valleys

Hurricane Katrina, 2005, September, Affecting the Bahamas, South Florida, Cuba, Louisiana (especially New Orleans, Mississippi, Alabama, the Florida Panhandle, and most of eastern North America, was the deadliest and costliest hurricane in the history of the United States. Eighty per cent of the city of New Orleans was flooded, and many neighboring parishes. It is estimated that Katrina caused over $81 billion in damages, and 1,836 fatalities

1993, The Mid-West’s great flood of 1993 cost 48 lives and more than $15 billion in damages. Nine states were affected by the flood: North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri, Wisconsin, and Illinois. It was the largest and most significant flood event to ever occur in the United States. Hundreds of levees failed along the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers. The Mississippi River continued to flood for the next three years.

4. Mid-Atlantic United States

2006, June, The Mid-Atlantic Flood of 2006 affected the states of New York, New Jersey, Maryland, Delaware, Virginia and Washington, DC. Considered to be the worst flooding in this area since 1979, over 200,000 residents were evacuated in Pennsylvania with the Susquehanna River valley and tributaries flooding. Mudslides in the mountainous areas of Virginia were also reported.

1996, Quebec, Canada, the Saguney Flood, a series of flash floods caused over $1.5 billion (Canadian) worth of damage and killed seven people after two weeks of constant rain. After the flood, contaminated sediments at the bottom of the Saguenay and HaHa Rivers were covered, no longer posing a threat to the eco-system.

5. Caribbean

2004, September, Flooding from Hurricane Jeanne leaves over 1,000 dead in Haiti, with 1250 missing.

2004, May, Flash floods and rivers of mud in Haiti and Dominican Republic kill over 900 people.

1999, December, Vargas State Mudslides, Venezuela, 10,000 to 50,000 people dead or missing, Venezuela’s worst natural disaster in fifty years was brought about after weeks of torrential rain.

1994, Paez River Disaster, Columbia, Cauca and Huila Province, a superficial earthquake and subsequent mudslide destroy the small town of Paez. Over 1,100 people are killed.

6. Argentina/Uruguay/Southern Brazil

2003, May, floods displace 100,000 people as the Rio Salado river floods throughout Argentina.

2001, August to October, the worst flooding is on record in the Pampas region, with a mean annual precipitation increase of 35%.

1997, October, torrential rains, flooding, and El Nino leave more than 20,000 people homeless in southern Brazil.

7. Europe

2007, June and July, Widespread flooding throughout England and parts of Wales creates the wettest May to July since 1766.

2006, April, The Danube floods in Serbia, Romania, and Bulgaria, with economic losses thought to be as high as the floods of 2002.

2002, August, European Flood of 2002, Germany, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Slovakia, Poland, Romania, and Croatia experience the worst floods since 1500. Cleanup cost--$20 billion.

8. India

2006, Orissa, India, sees the worst floods in twenty years, triggered by monsoon rains, accompanied by landslides.

2005, July, the Maharashtra Flood’s death toll is 1493.

2005, July, the Mumbai, India flood kills 1,000, after being inundated by record rainfall.

9.Africa

2007, July, Sudan, the worst floods in Sudan's history with 122 deaths and 200,000 homeless with the early flooding of the Atbara and Nile Rivers.

10. Indonesia

2007, February, Waters upt to six feet deep in Jakarta, Indonesia, create scenes reminiscent of New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. 340,000 people are forced to leave their homes.

The Mississippi and Missouri Rivers flood. The Mississippi River will almost cut the nation in two. The Mississippi River forms a large bay covering large portions of Texas. Houston and Corpus Christi are under ocean waters. The newly widened banks of the Mississippi River cause the river to be named, “The River of Cooperation.” Because this becomes one of the major sources of fresh water in the nation, this large river becomes a major source of irrigation water in the United States. Areas along the River of Cooperation become the new agricultural areas of the nation. Learn more about the I AM America Prophecies for the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers.
Eastern Europe and Western Russia are flooded by the Arctic and Atlantic Oceans. This is due to a combination of Global Warming; freezing, thawing, and re-freezing of ice sheets and glaciers, and mega-quakes. The Ural Mountains survive the changes, and emerge as a large peninsula island, renamed, “The Shiny Pearl.” Learn more about the Freedom Star Map World Prophecies.
High tides flood Baltimore, forming a new swamp area. The Everglade area of Florida will flood again and again, and residents can expect rising ocean waters to deplete the coastlines by 100 to 600 feet along the eastern seaboard. The city of Seattle is flooded; portions of Portland also flood. The Columbia River is prophesied to flood extensively during the "Times of Changes." Learn more about the US 6-Map Scenario Prophecies.
Dartmouth Flood Observatory

USGS Measures A Century of Floods

Report from RMS (Founded at Stanford University in 1988, RMS is a world provider of products and services for the quantification and management of catastrophe risks.): Central Europe Flooding, 2002

Report from RMS: Hurricane Katrina: Profile of a Super Catastrophe

The 1996 Flooding of the Saguenay Valley, Quebec--lessons from a disaster. by Gregory Brooks, Geological Survey of Canada