Image No: IMG_9189_flood damage |
|
|
 |
|
Downloadable sizes |
Format |
| Web use only - 1MB* |
RGB |
| A5** - 10MB |
RGB |
| A4** - 25MB |
RGB |
*Images sizes are approximate
and give a guide to size only.
**Print size is approximate and
indicative only. No guarantee is given for exact sizes.
Please contact us for larger sizes
and further information.
Download Preview
To download the image shown right click (mac, ctrl+click) on the image. Select
the Save Image As... option from the menu that appears. Choose
the destination where you wish to save the image.
|
On Thursday 19th November 2009 over 31cm of rain fell in 24 hours on the Cumbrian mountains. The single largest rainfall total in the British Isles since records began. It caused unprecedented flooding, with Cockermouth being particularly badly hit after both the Cocker and Derwent burst their banks. The main street was 5 feet underwater and £millions worth of damage was caused. This shot shows the Calva Bridge in Workington which was damaged in the floods and is now one of many bridges closed for safety reasons.
weather
extreme weather
environment
rain
rainfall
exceptional
global warming
deluge
climate change
Cumbria
Lake District
flood
flooding
flood damage
destruction
water
water power
river
flood damage
polluted
contaminated
flood water
bridge
cxollapse
destroyed
destruction
bridge collapse
washed away
Workington
River Derwent
infrastructure
Calva Bridge
condemned
damaged
crack
collapse
|
|
Send to Friend
- Lightbox
|
| |
|
|
|
|