Permalink: https://photo.greenpeace.org/archive/2013-Colorado-Floods-Aftermath-27MZIFV49D29.htmlConceptually similar2013 Colorado Floods AftermathGP04SVECompleted★★★★2013 Colorado Floods AftermathGP04SVCCompleted★★★★2013 Colorado Floods AftermathGP04SVDCompleted★★★★2013 Colorado Floods AftermathGP04SVHCompleted★★★★2013 Colorado Floods AftermathGP04TFCCompleted★★★★2013 Colorado Floods AftermathGP04TFACompleted★★★★2013 Colorado Floods AftermathGP04SVACompleted★★★★2013 Colorado Floods AftermathGP04T05Completed★★★★2013 Colorado Floods AftermathGP04TFTCompleted★★★★View AllGP04T082013 Colorado Floods AftermathFlooding from Four Mile Canyon Creek, US, normally a dry stream bed, eroded part of Topaz Street. Clean-up from recent flooding continues in the Colorado Front Range. Torrential rains that lashed the northern Front Range of Colorado delivered six months worth of normal rainfall from September 11 to 15, 2013 causing a record flooding in the area.Locations:Boulder-Colorado-North America-United States of AmericaDate:20 Sep, 2013Credit:© Bob Pearson / GreenpeaceMaximum size:4928px X 3264pxKeywords:Cars-Cleaning-Climate (campaign title)-Climate change-Climate change impacts-Day-Destruction-Erosion-Floods-Houses-KWCI (GPI)-Natural disasters-Outdoors-Roads-Storms (climate change)-Storms (weather)-Streams-Sunny-TreesShoot:2013 Colorado Floods AftermathDocumentation of the aftermath of flooding in Colorado, US, between September 11 and 15, 2013. Torrential rains that lashed the northern Front Range of Colorado delivered six months worth of normal rainfall in days, an amount the National Weather Service characterized as of "Biblical proportion." Eight people are known to have died and more than a thousand homes are destroyed.