The Taiwanese government is sending more than 4,000 extra soldiers to speed up rescue efforts after last weekend's deadly Typhoon Morakot.
Hundreds of people feared buried by mudslides in the south of the country have been found alive.
But Taiwan's President Ma Ying-jeou - who visited the rescue operation centre in Qishan - said hundreds more were likely to have died.
So far at least 70 people are known to have been killed.
Military helicopters have been airlifting some of the survivors to safety, and dropping provisions for others. Continuing rain has hampered their efforts.
It is now confirmed that all three crew aboard a rescue helicopter which crashed in the bad weather on Tuesday were killed.
President Ma met survivors and anxious relatives waiting for news of loved ones.
He said no effort would be spared to rescue them.
Nearly 1,000 people were found alive in a cluster of villages flattened by muddy landslides, and survivors have recounted the horror of watching their homes vanish.
One eyewitness described the devastation wrought on the village of Hsiaolin.
"I saw the mountain crumbling in seconds almost like an explosion and bury half of our neighbourhood," Huang Chin-bao, 56, told AFP news agency.
He said he and 40 neighbours were guided by his two dogs to higher ground.
"The dogs are our saviours," he said.
The typhoon struck Taiwan at the weekend, causing the worst flooding in 50 years.
'Save my village'
The BBC's Cindy Sui at the rescue centre in Qishan says the authorities fear that hundreds more people could still be trapped.
She says family members from surrounding areas have been converging on Hsiaolin, demanding that helicopters be sent to their villages too.
Some are carrying signs that read, "Save my village".
The search for survivors has been a slow process as the only way in and out of the villages is by helicopter, our correspondent adds.
The BBC's Alastair Leithead, also at the Qishan rescue base, says a high school playing field has become a landing pad for helicopters, and ambulances are lining the running track to ferry the injured to hospital.
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