October 2015 North American storm complex
The October 2015 North American storm complex was an extratropical storm that triggered a high precipitation event, which caused historic flash flooding across North and South Carolina. The incipient cold front traversed the Eastern United States on September 29–30, producing heavy rain in multiple states. The system subsequently stalled just offshore. Tapping into moisture from the nearby Hurricane Joaquin, a developing surface low brought heavy, continuous rain to southeastern States, with the worst effects concentrated in South Carolina where catastrophic flooding occurred. The event culminated in South Carolina on October 4 when numerous rivers burst their banks, washing away roads, bridges, vehicles, and homes. Hundreds of people required rescue and the state's emergency management department urged everyone in the state not to travel. Some areas of the state saw rainfall equivalent to a 1-in-1000-year event.
Satellite image of the storm over the Eastern United States on October 3, with Hurricane Joaquin to the southeast.
The South Carolina National Guard loading up sandbags for distribution across the state on October 3
A pole at a park in Cheraw, South Carolina. The ring around the pole indicates the height of the Pee Dee River during the 2015 flood.
A levee breach near Columbia, South Carolina, on October 5
Bethany Beach is an incorporated town in Sussex County, Delaware, United States. According to the 2010 Census Bureau figures, the population of the town is 1,060; however, during the summer months some 15,000 more populate the town as vacationers. It is part of the Salisbury, MD-DE Metropolitan Statistical Area.
The Bethany Beach boardwalk in April 2006, prior to the 2008–09 construction of a new dune between it and the Atlantic Ocean.
Bethany Beach contains many forms of wildlife, including sand sharks
A view of the beach in Bethany Beach
Garfield Parkway in downtown Bethany Beach