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Two vehicles carrying women and children from a park were washed away by a flash flood barreling down a canyon near the Utah-Arizona border, leaving 12 people dead and one person missing, officials said Tuesday, the same day that deaths from a flash flood in nearby Zion National Park were revealed.

The twisted wreckage  of one of two vans that were washed away in a flash flood with women and children inside rest on the bank of Short Creek on Sept. 15, 2015, in Hildale, Utah. (Credit: George Frey/Getty Images)
The twisted wreckage of one of two vans that were washed away in a flash flood with women and children inside rest on the bank of Short Creek on Sept. 15, 2015, in Hildale, Utah. (Credit: George Frey/Getty Images)

Among those killed in the vehicles were at least six children and three women, according to Utah officials in the city of Hildale and with Washington County Emergency Services.

Three people survived Monday’s flood, including a boy who was found walking around a creek, said Hildale Mayor Philip Barlow.

Two survived by escaping from their vehicle, he said. The youngest fatality was a child about age 4, said Hildale Assistant Fire Chief Kevin Barlow.

The two vehicles carried a total of 16 women and children after a visit to a park, the mayor said.

Most in the community are members of the Warren Jeffs polygamist sect known as the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, or FLDS.

One vehicle stopped Monday afternoon at the flooded Short Creek, whose high water prevented any crossing, and some occupants exited the vehicle to watch the flood, the mayor said.

Fire and rescue workers pull a woman from a car in knee-deep flood water in the town of Hildale, Utah, along the Arizona border on Sept. 15, 2015. (Credit: Chris and Lydia Wyler via CNN Wire)
Fire and rescue workers pull a woman from a car in knee-deep flood water in the town of Hildale, Utah, along the Arizona border on Sept. 15, 2015. (Credit: Chris and Lydia Wyler via CNN Wire)

At that moment, “a huge flow of debris and water” came from the canyon behind them, the mayor said.

“It came onto the street behind them and washed them into the ravine, and the dropoff there is 20, 30 feet. So the witnesses say the vehicles were just gone,” the mayor said.

The rush of water was so intense it washed the two vehicles hundreds of yards downstream, and one vehicle was found a quarter mile away, in the creek, the mayor added.

The flooding ravaged an area that straddles the border from Hildale to Colorado City, Arizona.

The flash flood started with heavy rains in the canyons above Hildale, the assistant fire chief said.

“Most of the people were thrown from the vehicles,” the fire official said.

Chris Wyler said rain and hail walloped Hildale within minutes, then quickly subsided.

“It happened within like a half hour, 45 minutes,” he said. “(Then) it was just gone. And then the sun was shining again.”

By late Monday, he said, the water had mostly receded.

But as of Tuesday evening, storms threatened yet another round of flooding.

A flash flooding warning was issued until 7:45 p.m. local time for the Utah-Arizona border area, including Hildale and Colorado City, Arizona, the National Weather Service said.

The entrance tp Keyhole Canyon, a narrow slot popular with canyoneers, is just beyond the rise shown in this photo. (Credit: lofty3/Flickr via Creative Commons)
The entrance tp Keyhole Canyon, a narrow slot popular with canyoneers, is just beyond the rise shown in this photo. (Credit: lofty3/Flickr via Creative Commons)

The Zion National Park area, about 15 miles north of Hildale and also in Washington County, was likewise struck by fatal flash flooding on Monday.

Three canyoneers who were exploring a popular slot canyon were killed, and four others are missing, the park announced Tuesday.

After storms dropped 0.63 inches of rain in Zion Canyon in one hour, prompting flash floods, vehicles connected to seven people who were canyoneering at Keyhole Canyon were found still at the entry point Monday night.

The search for the missing group began Tuesday, and three people were confirmed dead.

The search for the remaining canyoneers has been hampered by continuing flash-flooding concerns, the park said.

Meanwhile, Utah Gov. Gary R. Herbert said the state is offering “its full resources to the town of Hildale to aid with the search and rescue effort.”

“I am heartbroken to hear of the recent tragedy in Washington County,” the governor said.