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JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) —
    The latest on the search for a U.S. cargo ship carrying 33 people that has been missing since it encountered high winds and heavy seas from Hurricane Joaquin. All times local:
    10:15 a.m.
    The Coast Guard says it found the body of one crew member from a U.S.-based cargo ship that sank during a hurricane off the Bahamas.
    Capt. Mark Fedor said Monday that an airborne crew spotted several survival suits floating amid debris from the El Faro. Most were empty but one had a body. A helicopter crew confirmed the person was dead but had to leave the body behind to continue the search for possible survivors.
    Coast Guard cutters and aircraft and a U.S. Navy plane continued searching the Atlantic Ocean for the missing crew. The ship's owners say it carried more than enough lifeboats and rafts for the crew.
    Fedor also says crews found one of two lifeboats from El Faro, but it had no people or signs of life. He says the ship had two lifeboats, and each can hold 43 people.
    ___
    9:40 a.m.
    The Coast Guard says a ship that went missing during a hurricane off the Bahamas sank, but the search continues for the 33 people on board.
    Chief Petty Officer Jon-Paul Rios says the Coast Guard and the ship's owner concluded Monday that the 790-foot container ship El Faro sank after encountering Hurricane Joaquin's high winds and heavy seas last week.
    Rios says Coast Guard cutters and aircraft and a U.S. Navy plane continued searching the Atlantic Ocean for the missing crew. The ship's owners say it carried more than enough lifeboats and rafts for the crew.
    Earlier, a container, pieces of another container and a life ring from the El Faro was recovered. An oil sheen also was spotted.
    ____
    8:30 a.m.
    The Coast Guard is beginning its fifth day of searching near the Bahamas for a U.S. cargo ship carrying 33 people missing since it encountered Hurricane Joaquin.
    Coast Guard Chief Petty Officer Bobby Nash said Monday that two cutters continued searching overnight for the 790-foot El Faro, and a C-130 aircraft was launched at dawn. Nash said a third cutter was on its way.
    Searchers have found debris and clues but no definitive word on the fate of the vessel or those on board.
    The vessel's owner said a container that appears to have come from the ship was found and a debris field was found that included what appeared to be pieces of container. Searchers also spotted an oil sheen and found a life ring from the El Faro.

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COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) —
    After a week of steady rain, the showers tapered off Monday and an inundated South Carolina turned to surveying a road system shredded by historic flooding, and in a cruel twist, thousands of residents faced the prospect of going days without running water.
    The governor warned communities downstream, near the low-lying coast, that they may still see rising water and to be prepared for more evacuations. More than 900 people were staying in shelters and nearly 40,000 people were without water.
    At least 12 weather-related deaths in two states were blamed on the vast rainstorm, with one of the latest coming when a sedan drove around a barricade and stalled in rushing waters. The driver drowned, but a woman who was riding in the car managed to climb on top of it and was rescued by a firefighter who waded into the water.
    "She came out the window. How she got on top of the car and stayed there like she did with that water— there's a good Lord," Kershaw County Coroner David West said.
    On Monday, the rains moved north into North Carolina and the mid-Atlantic states. The storm was part of a system that dumped an unprecedented amount of rain across South Carolina and several other states. Satellite images released by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration show South Carolina getting drenched by a "fire hose" of tropical moisture.
    In the animation, Hurricane Joaquin pounds the Bahamas and moves away from the East Coast as a separate area of low pressure spins across the Southeast, unleashing a torrent of water over South Carolina.
    Sunday was the wettest day in the history of South Carolina's capital city Columbia, according to the National Weather Service.
    The 16.6 inches of rain that fell on Gills Creek near downtown Columbia on Sunday was the rainiest day in one single spot in the U.S. in more than 16 years, among weather stations with more than 50 years of record-keeping. There was so much rain there, a gauge was swept off a bridge and had to be replaced by members of the U.S. Geological Survey.
    The last time there was that much rain in one spot on a single day in the U.S. was Sept. 16, 1999, when 18.3 inches fell on Southport, North Carolina, during Hurricane Floyd.
    "The flooding is unprecedented and historical," said Dr. Marshall Shepherd, a meteorologist and director of the atmospheric sciences program at the University of Georgia.
    He said the unique double punch of the upper level low — aided by a "river" of tropical moisture in the atmosphere from Hurricane Joaquin spinning far out in the Atlantic — gave the monster rainstorm its punch.
    South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley has said the deluge is the kind of storm seen only once in 1,000 years.
    On Monday, she said 550 roads and bridges were closed across the state. All will have to be checked for structural integrity, which could take weeks or longer.
    She said floodwaters will continue to rise in some areas as rainwater runs down the state toward the coast.
    "This is not over. Just because the rain stops does not mean that we are out of the woods," Haley said at a news conference.
    Haley, a Republican, also thanked President Barack Obama for a disaster declaration that frees up federal resources and for personally calling her Monday morning.
    "He was extremely gracious and kind," she said.
    Haley said that nine people have died in the state since the storm started. Two additional weather-related deaths were reported in North Carolina.
    At least three people were killed Sunday in South Carolina, including a transportation worker who died overseeing work near downtown Columbia, a woman who was swept away in her SUV and the man who drove around the barricade Sunday night in the Lugoff community northeast of Columbia, said the coroner said.
    McArthur Woods, 56, drowned after his car was inundated. His passenger was rescued when someone who heard her screams called 911 around 10 p.m.
    Haley said that 25 emergency shelters are open, housing more than 900 people. Utility crews, meanwhile, were working to restore power to 26,000 people still without power, she said.
    The flooding forced hundreds of weekend rescues and threatened the drinking water supply for Columbia, with officials warning some could be without potable water for days because of water main breaks. The capital city told all 375,000 of its water customers to boil water before drinking.
    The situation required firefighters from several departments to use a half-dozen fire trucks and pumps to deliver hundreds of thousands of gallons of water to Palmetto Health Baptist Hospital in downtown Columbia.
    Capt. Isaac Romey of the Columbia Fire Department said "the tankers pull the water out of the hydrants, move it into dump tanks and then pull it into the hospital." The water was not for consumption.
    Elsewhere, nearly 75 miles of Interstate 95 — the main link from the Southeast U.S. to the Northeast — was closed.
    Columbia Police Chief William Holbrook issued a statement Monday saying search teams would check for any people still needing evacuation, and crews will mark the front doors of homes checked with a fluorescent orange X once searched.
Many schools and colleges, including the University of South Carolina, canceled classes Monday and Tuesday, and some businesses planned to stay shuttered. State climatologists have said the sun could peek out Tuesday.
    In the Florence area, Robert Finger thought nothing about driving through water standing only about 6 inches deep on a country road — shallow enough that he could see the painted lines. But that was enough to leave him stranded for hours.
    Finger said he sat inside his stalled vehicle from about 3 p.m. Sunday until 8 a.m. Monday, when a sheriff's deputy happened upon him.
    "I was driving through a low spot, and my engine cut out because water got into the electronics," said Finger, 35, of Florence, as he dried out at a Baptist church serving as one of Florence County's evacuation shelters. "Somebody behind me pushed me up and out, and I just sat on the side of the road, reading."

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LIMA TOWNSHIP, Mich. (AP) —
    A farm in southeastern Michigan has become a natural history museum since bones from a woolly mammoth were discovered.
    More than 200 people have stopped at Jim Bristle's farm in Washtenaw County since Friday. Bristle says people have been driving into Chelsea and asking for directions.
    One visitor was in hospice care. Bristle tells The Ann Arbor News the reaction has "just been amazing."
    Bristle and another man were digging in a soybean field when they found the ribs last week. About 20 percent of the woolly mammoth's skeleton was eventually discovered.
    Bristle says the bones will be donated to the University of Michigan.
    Judy Coleman pulled her granddaughter out of school Monday to see the muddy skeleton in Bristle's barn. She says it's "once-in-a-lifetime opportunity."


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