Dangerous flood waters from historically swollen rivers in the Pacific north-west were continuing to cause a huge threat on Friday as 100,000 people in the area were under evacuation warnings and more deluges are due on Sunday.
Torrential rain triggered flooding on Thursday across much of the region from Oregon north through Washington state and into British Columbia, closing dozens of roads and already prompting the evacuations of tens of thousands of people.
The intense rain began earlier in the week, swept into the region by a storm system meteorologists call an atmospheric river, a vast airborne current of dense moisture funneled inland from the Pacific Ocean.
The governor of Washington, Bob Ferguson, declared a statewide emergency on Wednesday in response to the heavy weather that has caused mudslides and washed out roads and submerged vehicles.
Western Washington state bore the brunt of the storm, with flood watches posted across the Cascade and Olympic mountains and Puget Sound, as well as for a northern slice of Oregon, a region home to some 5.8 million people, according to the US National Weather Service.
The same storm system brought heavy showers and flooding to western Montana and an edge of northern Idaho.
Roughly 100,000 residents in western Washington on Friday were under level 3 evacuation orders urging them to immediately move to higher ground, the bulk of them in rural Skagit county north of Seattle, said Karina Shagren, a spokesperson for the state emergency management division.
About 3,800 evacuees were believed to be in need of temporary shelter, Skagit county emergency chief Julie de Losada said.
First responders have rescued several people, including by helicopter in King and Whatcom counties in recent days.
The worst flooding was reported along the Skagit, Snohomish and Puyallup rivers. More than 30 highways and dozens of smaller roads were closed due to flooding across the region, state officials said.
Several lengthy segments of the BNSF Railway, a major freight line serving the Pacific north-west, were washed out or closed due to flooding, the company said, citing reported rainfall of 10 to 17in or more in many areas.
Some rivers have been cresting several feet above record levels and on Friday morning had not receded. The forecast is for lighter rain on Friday and a mostly dry Saturday but meteorologists predict more heavy rain on Sunday for the region.
In British Columbia, five of the six Canadian highways leading to the Pacific port city of Vancouver were shut down due to floods, falling rocks and the risk of avalanches, local authorities said on Thursday.
“This situation is evolving and very dynamic,” said the transport ministry of British Columbia.
Access to Vancouver relies largely on a limited highway and railway network that crosses the Rocky Mountains.
While such storms are not uncommon on the US Pacific coast, meteorologists say they are likely to become more frequent and extreme over the next century if global heating from the human-induced climate crisis continues at current rates.