More than 500 people are now known to have died in floods in south-eastern Brazil, the country's worst natural disaster for several decades.
Heavy rain has brought massive mudslides down on several towns, where thousands have been made homeless.
Police say the number of dead is likely to rise further.
The death toll has now surpassed the number killed in mudslides in Caraguatatuba in Sao Paulo state in 1967, in which up to 430 people died.
'It's all gone'Rescue workers will resume searching for survivors in the mountainous Serrana region, north of Rio de Janeiro, on Friday.
Many spent Thursday scrabbling with their bare hands through debris.
On her visit to the area, President Dilma Rousseff promised a shipment of seven tonnes of medicines.
In the Campo Grande area of Teresopolis, which was earlier cut off, rescuers found people pulling bodies from the mud.
One Campo Grande resident, Carols Eurico, told the Associated Press: "I have friends still lost in all of this mud. It's all gone."
At The Scene
If you reach the city centre of Teresopolis, you might not think the scale of destruction was too great, but on the outskirts and other neighbourhoods - such as Campo Grande and Posse - there is a sense of just how much was affected.
In these places, there is mud everywhere - some of it more than 3m (8.5ft) high. Cars are destroyed and turned upside down, from small sports cars to big trucks. The river that runs through the city is known to be calm, but it is now completely flooded. Most of the houses destroyed were poor quality, made out of timber. Emergency services are everywhere.
Many of the people who lost their homes have taken shelter in the local gymnasium. Every now and then, a new list comes out of people that have been confirmed dead.
Surprisingly at the gym, most people managed to remain calm and were chatting, although many have lost a friend or family member. But everyone in Teresopolis can feel just how terrible this disaster has been.
Another resident told AFP news agency: "One woman tried to save her children, but her two-month-old baby was carried away by a torrent like a doll."
The Brazilian armed forces have brought in a field hospital and hundreds of people have taken refuge in the gymnasium in Teresopolis.
But the number of injured was threatening to overwhelm the medical services.
Jorge Mario, the mayor of the Teresopolis, said: "There are three or four neighbourhoods that were totally destroyed in rural areas. There are hardly any houses standing there and all the roads and bridges are destroyed."
In one dramatic filmed rescue, 53-year-old Ilair Pereira de Souza was pulled by rope from a destroyed house surrounded by raging water.
"I thought I was going to die," she said.
Ms Pereira de Souza had jumped with her dog Beethoven but was forced to let him go to survive.
"If I had tried to save him, I would have died. The poor thing. He stayed for a moment looking me in the eyes, and then he was swept away."
"It's very overwhelming. The scenes are very shocking," President Rousseff said on her visit to the area on Thursday.
The day before, she signed a decree authorising 780m reais ($480m; £296m) in emergency funding for the affected areas.
Ms Rousseff described the destruction as an act of God but she also expressed anger at illegal construction.
"We saw areas in which mountains untouched by men dissolved. But we also saw areas in which illegal occupation caused damage to the health and lives of people."
Saying that building houses in risky areas was "the rule rather than the exception" in Brazil, she added: "When there are no housing policies in place, where will a person with an income of up to two minimum wages live? He will live where he is not allowed to."
'Humble people'Ms Rousseff said the state would care for the victims but said stopping future tragedies would be a priority.
Nova Friburgo, Teresopolis and Petropolis
- The towns, which lie in a region called the Serrana, are popular holiday destinations for city dwellers keen to enjoy fresh mountain air and verdant surroundings
- They also attract mountain climbers from around the country and elsewhere
- In the 19th Century they were a popular summer destination for emperors and aristocrats. Petropolis was named after Emperor Pedro II, and is known as the Imperial City of Brazil
- The area also has historical links with German and Swiss settlers
- Tourism has replaced agriculture as the region's principal economic activity
- The towns' populations have quadrupled over the last 30 years, according to the local governor
"We are here to guarantee that this moment of reconstruction will also be a moment of prevention."
Rio de Janeiro Governor Sergio Cabral blamed local governments for allowing poor building and illegal occupations.
"Unfortunately, what we saw in Petropolis, Teresopolis and Nova Friburgo, since the 1980s, was a problem similar to what happened in the city of Rio - letting the poorer people occupy risk areas."
He said some rich mansions had been damaged but most of the victims were "humble people".
Mr Cabral ended the news conference by asking people in risk areas to leave their houses and seek public shelter or in other homes.
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