A woman has died after the car she was in became submerged in floodwaters triggered by days of torrential rain in north Queensland.
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The woman's body was found with her seat belt still on about 8am on Wednesday after a search and rescue by Mackay police and SES crews, police said.
She was trapped in the vehicle about 5am with two other people on Surprise Creek Rd at Mount Ossa, north of Mackay, with the other occupants able to escape.
They were transported in a stable condition to Mackay Base Hospital.
One of the survivors was treated for a cut to their head, while the other did not suffer any injuries.
"This is the fifth road crash fatality within the Mackay police district in the month of May," Acting superintendent Mark Burgess said.
"I cannot say this with any more conviction: drive to the conditions on Queensland roads and if it is flooded, forget it."
Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk said the woman's death is a stark reminder of the dangers weather poses.
Queensland Fire and Emergency Services received 110 calls for help across the state as six-hour rainfalls reached 240mm in some areas of the north by 1am on Wednesday.
"Although rain is expected to move off the coast in the state's north today, a large number of roads remain flooded," QFES said in a statement.
"Please avoid unnecessary travel and don't risk it on flooded roads and causeways."
There are major flood warnings in place across north and western Queensland at the Bohle River near Townsville, Haughton River and Cooper Creek.
Over 24 hours, 244mm of rainfall was recorded at Mourilyan Mill, south of Innisfail, with Paluma registering 180mm.
The Bureau of Meteorology advised heavy rainfall may develop again on Wednesday over eastern parts of the Herbert and Lower Burdekin as well as the northern Central Coast and Whitsundays.
It is expected to ease later on Wednesday as the rain moves offshore.
On Tuesday, rainfall records tumbled at the Hughenden, Richmond and Cloncurry airports as those inland regions recorded their highest-ever May totals.
Townsville experienced flash flooding overnight with police officers temporarily stranded in Kirwan as waters rose around the station.
The city expects totals up to 250mm on Wednesday and Thursday with the severe weather warning indicating up to 200mm in a six-hour period.
"That whole area under the severe weather warning could see flash and riverine flooding," BOM senior forecaster Laura Boekel said on Tuesday.
A flood watch is current for dozens of river and creek catchments across Queensland and almost 300 roads have been cut by floodwaters.
In the southeast, heavy rain hit the Sunshine Coast and northern Brisbane, with 135mm falling at Mapleton and 113mm at Maleny.
Seqwater has alerted Moreton Bay region residents it has started flood releases from North Pine Dam, with releases also set to start from Wivenhoe and Somerset Dams into the Brisbane River from 10am.
The utility expects the releases to flood Savages Crossing, Colleges Crossing, Burtons Bridge and Kholo Bridge downstream, but not Fernvale Bridge.
"If you are downstream of the dam, stay away from fast flowing or deep water near waterways and flood plains," Seqwater said.
Australian Associated Press