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A desperate search for flood victims in Texas intensified Sunday after the Guadalupe River gushed over its banks in darkness days earlier, swallowing homes and vehicles and leaving a staggering toll of destruction.

At least 52 people have died in flooding triggered by unrelenting rain that drenched the Kerr County area, about 85 miles northwest of San Antonio, on Thursday night into Friday. Forty-three of the deaths ‒ 28 adults and 15 children ‒ were in the county, Sheriff Larry Leitha said.

Anguished parents waited for word through the weekend on the more than two dozen children still missing from Camp Mystic, a Christian girls' camp at the river's edge. Authorities have not said how many others are unaccounted for.

The National Weather Service said Kerr County, located in Texas Hill Country, was inundated by as much as 15 inches of rain triggered by intense thunderstorms − half of the total the region sees in a year. The Guadalupe River rose more than 26 feet in just 45 minutes, weather.com reported.

Crews have been working around the clock, scouring riverbanks littered with mangled trees and rubble. Rescuers have pulled residents from rooftops and found some survivors still clinging to trees. As search and rescue operations remain underway, meteorologists warned about additional rain worsening flooding across central Texas.

"We will not stop until every single person is found," Leitha vowed.

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