The search for survivors after a dam collapsed at a mine in Brazil has resumed after a second dam was ruled safe.
Rescue crews were held off for several hours over fears the adjacent dam might also be breached.
Residents have been allowed back into the town of Brumadinho, where the mine is located in southeastern Brazil.
Updating the figures, authorities said the number of people confirmed dead was 58, with as many as 300 missing.
Almost 200 were rescued alive, while 361 people have been found after being registered as disappeared.
The death toll is expected to rise as recovery teams reach the worst affected areas.
Earlier, the Vale mining company warned of dangerously high water levels at the second dam - part of the complex where disaster struck on Friday.
Even before the suspension, hopes were fading of finding more people alive.
Romeu Zema, the governor of Minas Gerais state, said the search effort was focused on recovering bodies.
Friday's collapse created a destructive torrent of thick sludge that buried victims and buildings in its path.
Rescue helicopters scoured the area following the rupture, plucking mud-covered survivors to safety.
Sonia Fatima da Silva was among dozens of anxious relatives trying to get information about missing family members.
Her son had been a Vale mining company employee for 20 years.
She said: "I'm angry... my hope is that they be honest. I want news, even if it's bad."
Over the weekend, state courts and the justice ministry in Minas Gerais froze about $1.5bn (£1.1bn) from Vale assets for state emergency services and told the company to report on how it would help the victims.
Brazil's attorney general Raquel Dodge promised to investigate the mining dam collapse, saying: "Someone is definitely at fault."
She noted there are 600 mines in the state that are classified as being at risk of rupture.
As well as the human cost, there are also concerns that the millions of tons of mining waste could contaminate huge swathes of land.
The region is still recovering from the collapse of a larger dam in 2015 that killed 19 people.
In that incident, a dam owned jointly by the Samarco Mineracao SA venture, Vale and BHP Billiton burst, burying local homes in what was considered Brazil's worst environmental disaster.
It left 250,000 people without drinking water and killed thousands of fish.
Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, who flew over the area to see the devastation for himself, has vowed to "take all the possible steps to minimise the suffering of families and victims".
The far-right leader had campaigned on pledges to kick-start Brazil's economy, including cutting red tape for mining and other industries.
However, environmentalists argue the latest disaster highlights a lack of regulation.
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