The drama unfolded as the US island territory, working without electricity, struggled to dig out and clean up from its disastrous brush with the hurricane, blamed for at least 33 deaths across the Caribbean.
The 1920's era earthen dam on the Guajataca River in northwest Puerto Rico cracked yesterday, prompting the government to issue an order for 70,000 people in downstream towns to evacuate.
The local office of the National Weather Service warned last evening of an "imminent dam break."
He said the dam had cracked under the weight of so much flooding, sending water gushing through and prompting fears of flash flooding.
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Yesterday, public safety chief Hector Pesquera had cited a different cause for the initial dam failure, according to the newspaper El Vocero. Pesquera said a drain which normally releases water from the dam in a controlled fashion had broken, sending it gushing out in torrents.
Puerto Rico was already battling dangerous floods elsewhere on the island because of Hurricane Maria, which hit before dawn Wednesday as part of its furious tear across the Caribbean.
As the island is without power but for emergency generators, and without telecommunications, the governor's entourage left a satellite phone with the mayor of Isabela so he can talk to crews manning the dam.
Rossello has called Maria the most devastating storm to hit the island in a century.
So far, a preliminary assessment said 13 people had died as a result of the storm, he told CNN yesterday.
So far, at least 33 people have been confirmed dead as a result of Hurricane Maria, including 15 in Dominica, three in Haiti and two in Guadeloupe.
After speaking with Puerto Rico's governor on Thursday night, US President Donald Trump promised to speed up relief efforts.
Of the 13 victims in Puerto Rico, eight died in the northern town of Toa Baja, one of the worst-hit areas which was ravaged by winds of more than 200 kilometers per hour and then hit by flooding when the island's largest river, La Plata, burst its banks. The winds have eased a bit since then but not much.
Others could be seen returning home after several days away to begin the arduous process of clearing their homes of the heavy mud left by the floodwaters in order to start the process of rebuilding.
Marisol Rosario, a 55-year-old housewife who fled with her husband, said the violent winds forced her to flee without taking their dog.
"I thought I would find him dead, but he managed to climb on top of the furniture and survive," she said tearfully.
Across the island, streets were littered with debris from the storm, with toppled trees, street signs and power cables strewn everywhere.
Puerto Rico's electricity network has been crippled by the storm and engineers say it could take months for power to be fully restored.
US federal emergency chief Brock Long said ships carrying millions of meals and bottles of water were trying to dock as the island's ports are slowly reopened.
Before reaching Puerto Rico, the storm devastaged the small island nation of Dominica.
And after striking Puerto Rico, the storm headed west toward the Dominican Republic where it damaged nearly 5,000 homes, forcing the evacuation of more than 18,000 people, the president's office said.
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