Pinch gangs in Brazil nut are contending to reach areas impacted by venomous mudslides and inundations because of regenerated rain.

Functionaries say more than 500 peoples are known to have passed away in the floods - the area's worst in xes.

Local media reported savers had to strain worst-hit areas on foot because vehicles can not cut across obturated roads.

Mountainous areas northerly of Rio de Janeiro have been hit by the heaviest downpors in 44 classes.

The rainfall caused rivers of clay to rush down the quite a littles and snap through towns, pointing houses and throwing machines over buildings.

More than 5,000 peoples have been left dispossessed, and officials said at least 511 peoples had conked.

Soothsayers have warned that the firm rain in the area will continue into next calendar week.

Exigency gangs say the weather is causing severe troubles.

"The rainfall did not stop at dawn and is proceeding in the dawn, which is making the delivery attempts more difficult," fireman Lt Rubens Placido told Reuters news agency from the town of Nova Friburgo.

"The number of expiries is going to arise quite a bit. There are still a lot of people buried." .

TELECASTING footage showed heavy equipment clarification tumbled tree diagrams and dust from streets strawed with broken mineral pitch.

Mortuaries were overrunning and had to store dead bodies in christian churches and police stations, local media reported.

In the largest necropolis in Teresopolis - where more than 220 died - rows of impertinently dug out tombs were marked with unsubdivided wooden crosses. Other burial grounds were either full or sunk under mud.

The death toll has now gone by the annihilating 1967 mudslides in Caraguatatuba, Sao Paulo state, in which about 430 peoples died.

Political leaders including President Dilma Rousseff have highlighted the practice session of peoples illicitly constructing dwellings on the side of hatfuls.

She has consecrated to give up such a catastrophe taking place again, and has reserved 780m reais ($ 480m ; 296m) in emergency financing for the unnatural surface areas.

The BBC's Paulo Cabral in Teresopolis says the dirt on the hillsides is still highly wet and unstable, so even a pocket size measure of body of water could be enough to cause new disasters.

He says saving squads are working around the clock searching for survivors, but in most cases they only determine bodies under the mud.

There have also been writes up of robbery, and some of the worst-affected dominions have now been desolated.



The Brazilian armed forces have brought in a field hospital and hundreds of peoples have taken recourse in the gym in Teresopolis.

But the number of wounded was threatening to deluge the medical services.

Jorge Mario, city manager of Teresopolis, said three or four localities had been "all put down".

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