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Adventures of a Global Wanderer
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Location Date South America 1487289600 Asia 1475362800 North America 1466636400 Europe 1443826800 Africa 1253833200 Asia -
Location Date China 1475362800 Japan 1475276400 Uzbekistan 1388275200 South Korea 1376521200 Singapore 1376434800 Indonesia 1376434800 Malaysia 1376262000 Brunei 1375743600 Taiwan 1359936000 Philippines 1359590400 Vietnam 1328313600 Cambodia 1327708800 Thailand 1327363200 Hong Kong 1221951600 Pakistan 1193875200 Oman 1193180400 United Arab Emirates 1193007600 South Korea -
Location Date Incheon 1376521200 Danyang-Gun 1374879600 Habuk-Myeon 1372460400 Songnisan 1370041200 Kuryongpo 1369436400 Songgwangsa 1368831600 Namhae 1368831600 Unjusa 1368745200 Unmunsa 1368226800 Tongyeong 1367017200 Seoul 1358553600 Seonyudo-Ri 1348354800 Gunsan 1348268400 Yeosu 1339714800 Daegu 1339628400 Impo 1338937200 Suncheon 1338073200 Boseong-Gun 1337986800 Gwangju 1337900400 Pohang 1337382000 Ganghwado 1336777200 Gimhae 1333753200 Busan 1324944000 Chilgok 1317682800 Gongju 1317423600 Gohyeon 1307228400 Ulsan 1306537200 Seongsan Ichulbong 1304895600 Jungmun 1304809200 Seogwipo 1304722800 Jeju City 1304636400 Cheongdo 1302908400 Koryong 1302303600 Geojedo 1298073600 Buyeo 1287183600 Gyeongju 1286578800 Andong 1285974000 Panmunjom 1285455600 Suwon 1285282800 Jeonju 1282086000 Daegu -
27 Jul 2011
This is shocking considering there is NO RAIN in Daegu!!
Seoul has been getting hammered by massive storms since the end of June so the ground is completely saturated. The rain path comes from the China Sea into the central korean peninsula (Seoul), then into North Korea, so Daegu in the south only gets passing drizzle at best. We are lucky! The death toll is now 38 since the article was written.
See the Rainfall Map - Daegu is in the lighter area
--------------------------------------- --------------------------------------- -
Taken from The Korea Herald - Jul 27, 2011
At least 19 people were killed Wednesday as two days of torrential rains triggered landslides, flooding and power outages in Seoul and central regions, emergency officials said.
As of 3 p.m., five others had been reported missing, the nation’s disaster control agency said.
“The death toll could rise, as more reports are coming in,” an official there said.
In Chuncheon, some 85 kilometers east of Seoul, 13 people died after a landslide destroyed a mountain pension and three residential buildings just after midnight Wednesday. Twenty others were injured, with four of them in critical conditions.
The victims were mostly students from Inha University in Incheon, who were in the area for volunteer work during their summer vacation, emergency officials said.
“I was sleeping on the second floor of the pension when I heard the thunderous sound of a landslide. The stairs collapsed and I was buried in mud,” one student rescued by firefighters told the Yonhap news agency.
In Seoul, which recorded nearly 400 millimeters of precipitation from Tuesday till early Wednesday, tons of mud from Mount Woomyeon swept through a village in the city’s southern ward of Seocho, killing at least five and leaving one missing.
About 20 houses in the Jeonwon Village were buried under mud, rescuers said.
The landslide also hit another village, Hyeongchon, leaving at least two dead. Among the victims was Yang Myeong-ja, the wife of Shinsegae chairman Koo Hak-su, She was killed while trying to check the basement of her home in the village.
Police, firefighters and public servants were carrying out rescue efforts, as half of the village, or 60 houses, were still isolated.
On top of the casualties from landslides, at least three people were reported missing in flooded streams and rivers, emergency officials said.
More than 700 houses and hundreds of cars were submerged across the nation.
Roads, streets, subway stations and residential districts were flooded in Seoul and elsewhere. Hundreds of traffic lights malfunctioned due to power outages, worsening the traffic chaos.
Districts in Gangnam, south of Han River in Seoul, were one of the hardest-hit areas.
“All roads near my home are flooded and it seems no bus operates here. I had to call my boss that I can’t come to work today,” a citizen living in Yangjae-dong wrote via Twitter.
The Sadang intersection, the southern gate to the capital, was flooded, causing severe traffic chaos in the area. Its nearly subway station, Sadang, was shut down in order to prevent it from being submerged.
Subway services were disrupted.
The services on subway line No. 1 was halted for about an hour in early Wednesday morning after Oryudong Station was submerged.
Another line linking Seoul and Bundang, a residential town in the city of Seongnam, was also disrupted due to submerged railroads.
By Lee Sun-young ([email protected])
Original Article
http://www.koreaherald.com/national/Det ail.jsp?newsMLId=20110727000539
More Pictures Below
Seoul has been getting hammered by massive storms since the end of June so the ground is completely saturated. The rain path comes from the China Sea into the central korean peninsula (Seoul), then into North Korea, so Daegu in the south only gets passing drizzle at best. We are lucky! The death toll is now 38 since the article was written.
See the Rainfall Map - Daegu is in the lighter area
--------------------------------------- --------------------------------------- -
Taken from The Korea Herald - Jul 27, 2011
At least 19 people were killed Wednesday as two days of torrential rains triggered landslides, flooding and power outages in Seoul and central regions, emergency officials said.
As of 3 p.m., five others had been reported missing, the nation’s disaster control agency said.
“The death toll could rise, as more reports are coming in,” an official there said.
In Chuncheon, some 85 kilometers east of Seoul, 13 people died after a landslide destroyed a mountain pension and three residential buildings just after midnight Wednesday. Twenty others were injured, with four of them in critical conditions.
The victims were mostly students from Inha University in Incheon, who were in the area for volunteer work during their summer vacation, emergency officials said.
“I was sleeping on the second floor of the pension when I heard the thunderous sound of a landslide. The stairs collapsed and I was buried in mud,” one student rescued by firefighters told the Yonhap news agency.
In Seoul, which recorded nearly 400 millimeters of precipitation from Tuesday till early Wednesday, tons of mud from Mount Woomyeon swept through a village in the city’s southern ward of Seocho, killing at least five and leaving one missing.
About 20 houses in the Jeonwon Village were buried under mud, rescuers said.
The landslide also hit another village, Hyeongchon, leaving at least two dead. Among the victims was Yang Myeong-ja, the wife of Shinsegae chairman Koo Hak-su, She was killed while trying to check the basement of her home in the village.
Police, firefighters and public servants were carrying out rescue efforts, as half of the village, or 60 houses, were still isolated.
On top of the casualties from landslides, at least three people were reported missing in flooded streams and rivers, emergency officials said.
More than 700 houses and hundreds of cars were submerged across the nation.
Roads, streets, subway stations and residential districts were flooded in Seoul and elsewhere. Hundreds of traffic lights malfunctioned due to power outages, worsening the traffic chaos.
Districts in Gangnam, south of Han River in Seoul, were one of the hardest-hit areas.
“All roads near my home are flooded and it seems no bus operates here. I had to call my boss that I can’t come to work today,” a citizen living in Yangjae-dong wrote via Twitter.
The Sadang intersection, the southern gate to the capital, was flooded, causing severe traffic chaos in the area. Its nearly subway station, Sadang, was shut down in order to prevent it from being submerged.
Subway services were disrupted.
The services on subway line No. 1 was halted for about an hour in early Wednesday morning after Oryudong Station was submerged.
Another line linking Seoul and Bundang, a residential town in the city of Seongnam, was also disrupted due to submerged railroads.
By Lee Sun-young ([email protected])
Original Article
http://www.koreaherald.com/national/Det ail.jsp?newsMLId=20110727000539
More Pictures Below
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