I don't think there is any possible way of having an accurate estimate. Floods are happening all the time, from time to time, all over the earth. Some are small, some are catastrophic. Since people have arrived on the scene, there have been many thousands of floods-- perhaps hundreds of thousands.
A brief period of rain is called a drizzle. This is the opposite of a flood or a storm where there is too much rain for long periods.
The Bible does not specifically mention whether there was rain before Noah's flood. However, it states that the "fountains of the great deep burst forth" along with rain, suggesting a cataclysmic event involving both water from the ground and rain from the sky.
It rained for 40 days & 40 nights, but the flood itself lasted 150 days
The Boscastle flood started in 2004 by torrential rain and the river Jordan burst its banks. It was also caused by snow melting, due from the winter. The rain helped the snow melt and the river to burst, therefore, caused a flood
The size of a flood typically depends on factors such as the amount of rainfall, the topography of the area, the land use practices, and the existing drainage systems. Additionally, factors like soil saturation level, snowmelt, and the presence of man-made barriers can also influence the size of a flood.
the rain is causing to much flood the seas and lakes are overflowing
5"or up
Yes it can
Conditions to create a flash flood are thunderstorms, lightning, rain and flooding.
A flood happens when water over flows from to much rain and over flows the city/village/etc........ also, when it rain for so long and rain so hard
It gets how much you want it to get. IF you want it too flood then be my guest
It can depend on the amount of rain received. The more rain, the more severe the flood is.
to much rain so sewers and ditches cant hold all of it
A flood can go as high as the land and water allow. There is no limit to the rise of flood waters because a flood is not a controlled event.
they have to much rain causing the river to rise over the river banks.
A flash flood
A flash flood.