In late January, 1910, the Seine flooded Paris. It never breached the city's flood walls; instead it reached beyond them by pushing up through the sewers. This was a slow-motion event, with the water rising gradually for more then a week, and then taking nearly a month to drain away entirely. Property damage was great but not a single person was killed. More here.
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1 comment:
Reminds me a bit of the Venetian acqua alta, although coming through the Parisian sewers I imagine it must have smelle much worse.
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