logo
GPR scanning helps identify 20 spots in Dharali where people could be trapped: Rescuers

GPR scanning helps identify 20 spots in Dharali where people could be trapped: Rescuers

Hindustan Times4 days ago
Uttarkashi , Rescuers on Tuesday said they have identified 20 spots at a depth of 2.5-3 metres using Ground Penetrating Radars in the lower areas of the flood-ravaged Dharali where there is the possibility of people being trapped, officials said as search and rescue operations entered the seventh day. GPR scanning helps identify 20 spots in Dharali where people could be trapped: Rescuers
Heavy equipment is being used with great caution as the soil is marshy and sinking, while machines are strictly not being used at places where there could be life, they said.
A team of experts from the National Geophysical Research Institute is lending a helping hand in the search operation to trace the 66 people, including 24 Nepali labourers, reported missing since the tragedy.
According to the India Meteorological Department , there is moderate to high flash flood risk in a few watersheds and neighbourhoods of 11 of Uttarakhand's 13 districts, including Uttarkashi, over the next 24 hours.
The devastating flash flood on August 5 virtually left almost half of Dharali village buried under mud and badly damaged an army camp in nearby Harsil.
"Through GPR scanning in the lower areas, 20 such spots have been found at a depth of two and a half to three metres, where buildings or other similar structures have been detected.
"Light debris and then solid ground have been found below three metres which suggest there might be people trapped at that level," said an official of the National Disaster Response Force , who is on ground zero.
Ground Penetrating Radars use radio waves to detect objects and structures up to a depth of 50 metres below the surface.
However, the search operation with heavy equipment is being carried out very carefully as the soil here is marshy and sinking, he said.
Machines are strictly not being used at places where there could be life. These points are marked, and digging there is being done with hand tools, the official said.
Rescue radar, which works on radio frequency, is being used in the debris-filled areas of Dharali to speed up search operations, a technical officer of Erica Engineering, which uses the equipment, said.
According to NDRF officials at the site, equipment like GPR and rescue radar will continue to be used until the entire debris-filled area is marked.
The NGRI had used its GPRs to locate people trapped in the SLBC tunnel collapse in Telangana in February this year.
These radars of NGRI can detect human life even in the presence of mud and water, the officials said, adding that the GPR surveys will also detect anomalies within the debris.
According to officials, 42 people are missing, including nine army personnel, eight residents of Dharali village, five from nearby areas, one person from Tehri district, 13 from Bihar and six from Uttar Pradesh.
Apart from these, 29 Nepali labourers were also reported missing initially, out of which five have been contacted after the restoration of mobile network in the area, he said.
More details about the remaining 24 labourers, like their mobile numbers and places where they hailed from, have been sought from their contractors in the hope that they might also have escaped to safety like five others of their team, Garhwal Commissioner Vinay Shankar Pandey said.
Meanwhile, air rescue of stranded people was delayed by bad weather on Tuesday, even as transportation of relief material to the affected people in Dharali and Harsil continued for the seventh day.
Supply of relief materials, including food items by helicopters, could be resumed only in the afternoon after the weather cleared, with consignments of foodgrains, edibles and fuel flown from Matli and Chinyalisaur helipads for the affected people.
Materials needed by the BRO to repair the damaged stretches of the Gangotri National Highway at Songad and Dabrani were also carried by the helicopters.
Two pregnant women of Dharali village were airlifted to Matli helipad to be taken to the District Hospital, Uttarkashi.
However, weather continues to be a major challenge with the IMD saying there is moderate to high flash flood risk likely over a few watersheds and neighbourhoods of 11 of Uttarakhand's 13 districts, including Uttarkashi, over the next 24 hours.
The districts at risk include Almora, Bageshwar, Chamoli, Champawat, Dehradun, Nainital, Pauri, Pithoragarh, Rudraprayag, Tehri and Uttarkashi, it said.
Surface runoff or inundation may occur at some fully saturated soils and low-lying areas during the period, it said.
The yatra to Kedarnath in Rudraprayag district and Badrinath and Hemkund Sahib in Chamoli have been suspended from August 12-14 in view of the MeT department's alert of heavy rains during the period in almost all the districts of Uttarakhand.
This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Wettest August day since 2020: Mumbai records 200mm rain overnight, 2 dead in Vikhroli landslide
Wettest August day since 2020: Mumbai records 200mm rain overnight, 2 dead in Vikhroli landslide

Hindustan Times

time24 minutes ago

  • Hindustan Times

Wettest August day since 2020: Mumbai records 200mm rain overnight, 2 dead in Vikhroli landslide

MUMBAI: The city woke on Saturday to the aftermath of one of its wettest nights in recent years, as torrential rain battered Mumbai while most were asleep. Between late Friday night and early Saturday morning, several neighbourhoods recorded over 200 mm of rainfall, prompting the India Meteorological Department (IMD) to upgrade its warning from orange (heavy to very heavy rain) to red (extremely heavy rain, likely to cause disruption and damage). Mumbai, India - August 16, 2025: People going through the logging water at Tilak Nagar in Mumbai, India, on Saturday, August 16, 2025. (Photo by Satish Bate/ Hindustan Times) (Hindustan Times) In the 24 hours between 8:30am on Friday and Saturday, Santacruz had logged 244.7 mm—the city's heaviest single-day rainfall recorded by the observatory since 2020. In contrast, Colaba recorded 83.2 mm. But the downpour, as is often the case in Mumbai, brought tragedy with it. Around 2.30AM, a landslide at Parksite in Vikhroli claimed the lives of two members of a family and left two others injured. Rainfall intensified after 11PM on Friday, peaking between 1AM and 4AM. In those three hours, the eastern and western suburbs bore the brunt: Marol recorded 207 mm, Santacruz 202 mm, and Vikhroli 196 mm. In the island city, Sion's Pratiksha Nagar logged 134 mm. 'The warning was updated due to the strengthening of synoptic conditions earlier than expected,' said Shubhangi Bhute, head of the Regional Meteorological Centre (RMC), Mumbai. 'A low-pressure system created an east-west trough along the Arabian Sea, which triggered heavy rainfall across the Konkan. The entire west coast can expect more intense showers in the coming days.' Streets under water By morning, several areas were inundated. In Chunabhatti, a scooter was found overturned and submerged, while a rickshaw's front end dipped into the floodwaters. At Sakinaka, residents waded through waist-deep water; Jogeshwari West resembled a pool; and Hindmata in Dadar once again turned into a lake, forcing the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) to deploy dewatering pumps. Waterlogging was also reported in Bandra West, Chembur, Juhu, Vile Parle, Ghatkopar and on the Santacruz–Chembur Link Road. Predictably, the Andheri subway and Aarey underpass were shut due to flooding. In Navi Mumbai, streets too were submerged in knee-deep water. Transport hit across city The deluge disrupted road and rail traffic. Central and Harbour Line train services slowed down, while waterlogged roads threw BEST buses off schedule. At Mumbai airport, at least 15 flights were forced into go-arounds before landing safely, including an IndiGo Airbus A321 that had a tail strike on touchdown. Two flights were diverted to Nagpur and Ahmedabad before eventually returning. Fortunately, as most of the downpour occurred overnight, floodwaters gradually receded through the morning. Janmashtami celebrations went ahead largely unhindered, though the BMC kept pumping stations and disaster management teams on high alert. Municipal commissioner Bhushan Gagrani said he was monitoring the situation from the control room. By noon, rainfall activity had eased, prompting the IMD to downgrade Sunday's warning back to orange. Between 8AM and 6PM on Saturday, the island city recorded 54.59 mm of rain, the western suburbs 39.02 mm, and the eastern suburbs 19.37 mm. According to the IMD, the city remains under an orange alert till Tuesday, before a downgrade to yellow (moderate rainfall) on Wednesday. By 6:45PM, the Tulsi Lake in the SGNP started overflowing, having reached its maximum capacity of 8,046 million litres. The dams that supply water to Mumbai are currently at 90.16% capacity.

Rains Unleash Havoc In Telangana, Adilabad Worst-Hit
Rains Unleash Havoc In Telangana, Adilabad Worst-Hit

Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

Rains Unleash Havoc In Telangana, Adilabad Worst-Hit

1 2 3 4 5 6 Hyderabad: Heavy rain lashed several districts of Telangana on Saturday, with Adilabad bearing the brunt as colonies, roads, and public places went under water. The downpour triggered a series of rescues, disrupted transport, and forced authorities across the state into high alert. The India Meteorological Department (IMD) has warned of very heavy to extremely heavy rainfall in several districts over the next 48 hours, along with thunderstorms, lightning, and gusty winds. Eleven locations in Adilabad district received more than 124 mm rainfall between 8.30 am and 5 pm, with Tamsi village recording 173 mm rain. Govindraopet in Mulugu district was pounded with 184 mm rain. In Adilabad, a lorry driver who was asleep in his vehicle was washed away in the swollen Tarnam stream, a tributary of the Kadem river, but was rescued by police, revenue officials, and local residents. Another lorry was swept off a bridge, though authorities managed to retrieve both vehicles. You Can Also Check: Hyderabad AQI | Weather in Hyderabad | Bank Holidays in Hyderabad | Public Holidays in Hyderabad | Gold Rates Today in Hyderabad | Silver Rates Today in Hyderabad The situation worsened as at least eight colonies in Adilabad town were inundated, a theatre was flooded—forcing cancellation of film shows—and students in a tribal ashram school at Ichoda were shifted to safety after rainwater gushed into the premises. District collector Rajarshi Shah and superintendent of police Akhil Mahajan supervised the evacuation, moving students to the second floor of the building. Officials said Rs 60 lakh has been sanctioned to rebuild the school's collapsed compound wall that allowed water inside. In Gudihathnoor's Seethagondhi village, DDRF teams rescued a family of six marooned by rising waters. The relentless rains also paralysed life in neighbouring Nirmal district, where a youth was swept away near Kannapur village after the Kadem reservoir gates were lifted to release excess inflows. SDRF personnel launched a search operation to trace him, identified as Tippireddy Gangadhar of Kadem mandal. District collector Abhilasha Abhinav inspected the Swarna project in Sarangapur mandal, warning residents in low-lying areas to remain alert as inflows from Maharashtra swelled reservoirs and streams. Nirmal district SP G Janaki Sharmila evacuated ten families from dilapidated houses in Koutla (K) village as a precaution. In Mancherial, officials monitored rising inflows into the Yellampalli project, which currently holds 15.6 tmc of water. With upstream releases from SRSP and Kadem projects continuing, authorities warned that water would be discharged once levels cross 17 tmc. Alerts were issued in villages to caution residents. Elsewhere, Mulugu district reported overflowing streams and waterlogging on highways, forcing motorists to take diversions. With reservoirs filling up rapidly, roads cut off, and colonies inundated, officials said rescue teams are on standby and urged people in vulnerable areas to remain cautious as the monsoon intensifies. According to the IMD, Bhadradri Kothagudem, Hanumakonda, Mahabubabad, Mulugu, and Warangal districts are likely to witness very heavy to extremely heavy rainfall in the coming days. Heavy to very heavy rainfall has also been forecast for Adilabad, Mancherial, Khammam, Siddipet, Jangaon, Suryapet, and several other districts. Almost all parts of the state are likely to see thunderstorms, lightning, and gusty winds ranging from 30-40 kmph. Stay updated with the latest local news from your city on Times of India (TOI). Check upcoming bank holidays , public holidays , and current gold rates and silver prices in your area.

No rainfall deficit in Delhi as light showers to continue
No rainfall deficit in Delhi as light showers to continue

Time of India

time7 hours ago

  • Time of India

No rainfall deficit in Delhi as light showers to continue

New Delhi: Regular rain activity has placed Delhi in the 'excess' category, with no district in the capital receiving deficit rainfall this monsoon. From June 1 to Aug 15, the city logged 506.9 mm of rainfall, with an excess of 43%. India Meteorological Department (IMD) has predicted very light to light rain over the next few days. Central Delhi received the highest rainfall with an excess of 47%, recording 644.5 mm from June 1 to Aug 15, compared to the normal of 438.2 mm. It is followed by north-east Delhi, which received an excess rainfall of 42%. Other districts which witnessed excess rainfall are east Delhi, south-east Delhi, south-west Delhi and west Delhi. Two districts have been placed in the normal range — New Delhi and south Delhi. However, data of north Delhi and north-west Delhi is unavailable. You Can Also Check: Delhi AQI | Weather in Delhi | Bank Holidays in Delhi | Public Holidays in Delhi | Gold Rates Today in Delhi | Silver Rates Today in Delhi On Saturday, parts of the city recorded very light to light rain. Between 8.30am and 5.30pm, Delhi's base station Safdarjung logged 0.4 mm of rainfall. During the same period, Ayanagar in south-west Delhi recorded 4.6 mm, Pusa and Najafgarh 2 mm each, and Ridge in north Delhi 1.8 mm of rainfall. "There could be moderate rain at isolated places over Delhi on Sunday and very light to light rain or thundershowers for the subsequent five days thereafter," said an IMD official. The maximum temperature on Saturday rose to 34.5 degrees Celsius, with the heat index or 'feel like' temperature recorded at 38.9 degrees Celsius around 5.30pm. The relative humidity oscillated between 71% and 98%. The minimum temperature, however, was reported at 25 degrees Celsius. Meanwhile, Delhi's air quality deteriorated from 'satisfactory' category on Friday to 'moderate' range on Saturday. The AQI was at 118. Stay updated with the latest local news from your city on Times of India (TOI). Check upcoming bank holidays , public holidays , and current gold rates and silver prices in your area. Get the latest lifestyle updates on Times of India, along with Happy Krishna Janmashtami Wishes ,, messages , and quotes !

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store