Deathtoll Brasil nears 350At least 335 people have died and dozens are missing after floods and landslides swept through mountain towns in southeastern Brazil.
Many homes were washed away as torrents of water and mud rushed down hillsides.
Heavy summer rain has fallen on the Serrana mountain region, north of Rio, since the start of the week.
Worst hit is the town of Teresopolis, 40 miles north of Rio, where reports say at least 114 people have died in 24 hours.
Images from the town, home to 180,000 people, showed tonnes of mud and water crashing into homes and washing cars away.
"I've only ever seen this before on television. It's like a horror film. Houses, cars were carried away by torrents of water. It was terrifying," said a 55-year-old woman called Angela.
"One woman tried to save her children but her two-month-old baby was carried away by a torrent like a doll."
With many mountain towns and villages now swamped in dirt and debris, the death toll is expected to rise as rescue workers uncover more bodies.
"It's a huge catastrophe, a major disaster," Teresopolis mayor Jorge Mario told the GloboNews television station.
Petropolis, in the same mountain region, has suffered at least 18 deaths, according to the AFP news agency.
At least three firefighters were among 107 people killed in mudslides in Nova Friburgo.
Brazil as a whole has suffered severe flooding this year, leaving thousands of people homeless.
The mountains saw 10in of rain fall in less than 24 hours.
Hundreds of people die every year in flooding in the South American country, with the poor who live in vulnerable, poorly-constructed homes most affected.