What is DANA, the strange weather phenomenon that has caused deadly flooding in Spain?

With record-high Mediterranean temperatures and a year's worth of rain falling in mere hours, Spain has been devastated by the weather phenomenon known as DANA.

A photo of a flooded street with cars stacked on top of each other from being pushed by water
Heavy rains flooded towns across the region of Valencia, Spain.
(Image credit: Anadolu via Getty Images)

A strange weather phenomenon known as a DANA has caused catastrophic flash flooding in Valencia, Spain, this week. More than 155 people have died and dozens remain missing in what meteorologists are calling one of the worst natural disasters in recent memory.

On Tuesday (Oct. 29), some areas received the equivalent of a year's worth of rainfall in just a few hours, triggering massive floods that devastated entire towns and left thousands of people stranded. In some areas, rainfall reached up to 20 inches of rainfall (500 liters per square meter).

María de los Ángeles Orfila
Live Science Contributor

María de los Ángeles Orfila is a science journalist from Montevideo, Uruguay, known for her long-form writing featured in El País and El Observador. She also participated in the Sharon Dunwoody Mentoring Program 2023 offered by The Open Notebook and has bylines in Science, Scientific American, and Discover Magazine, among other outlets.