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10 killed in rockfall on Brazilian lake

People embrace as they wait for information about missing relatives.
People anxiously await information about missing relatives after a massive slab of rock broke away from a cliff and toppled onto boaters near Capitolio, Brazil.
(Igor do Vale / Associated Press)
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The death toll from an accident in which a slab of cliff rock toppled onto pleasure boaters on a Brazilian lake has risen to 10, police said Sunday. Authorities worked to identify the dead and divers were searching the lake in case there were more victims.

Police Chief Marcos Pimenta said there was a possibility that some people were missing following the accident Saturday in Minas Gerais state. At least 32 people were injured, though most were released from hospitals by Saturday evening.

The accident occurred between the towns of Sao Jose da Barra and Capitolio, from which the boats had left. Video images showed a gathering of small boats moving slowly near the sheer rock cliff on Furnas Lake when a fissure appeared in the rock and a huge piece toppled onto several of the vessels.

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The bodies were taken to the city of Passos, where coroners worked to identify them. The work was difficult because of the ″high-energy impact″ of the rock on the boaters, said a regional civil police official, Marcos Pimenta. He said one victim had been identified as 68-year-old Júlio Borges Antunes.

Nineteen people were killed in an apartment fire in the Bronx, in what is New York City’s deadliest blaze in three decades.

Furnas Lake, which was created in 1958 for the installation of a hydroelectric plant, is a popular tourist draw about 260 miles north of Sao Paulo.

Officials suggested the wall coming loose could have been related to heavy rains recently that caused flooding in the state and forced almost 17,000 people out of their homes.

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The head of the Applied Geology Division of the Brazilian Geological Service, Tiago Antonelli, said the cliff wall is subject to centuries of erosion and susceptible to rain, heat and cold.

“It’s normal to happen in many canyons, even with rocks of that size. But nowadays, with the intensification of tourism, people are starting to get closer to these places and to register these phenomena with their cellphones,” Antonelli said.

Joana Sánchez, geology professor at the Federal University of Goiás, said authorities should have been controlling the site to prevent accidents, especially in the rainy season. The boats should have been kept more than half a mile from the waterfall where the accident happened, she said.

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