As many as 10,000 Bahamians from the Abaco Islands remain homeless, one week after Hurricane Dorian ravaged the islands and left at least 50 residents dead — with many more expected.

Survivors from the fierce storm continued to arrive at the Bahamian capital of Nassau on Tuesday, crowding shelters and hotel lobbies needing food, water and shelter — even as an international rescue effort continued to sift through the rubble and looking for more bodies.

“We’ve probably hit, at most, one-tenth of this area, and so far we found five human remains,” said Joseph Hillhouse, assistant chief of a Gainsville, Fla., fire rescue crew helping in the recovery. “I would say based off of our sample size, we’re going to see more.”

More than 2,000 people packed shelters in New Providence, Nassau’s largest city, The Tribune reported Tuesday, even as dozens of displaced children were reassigned to new schools there.

“We don’t know where we’re going to stay,” said Carla Ferguson, 51, whose Treasure Cay home was destroyed by the storm. “We don’t know.”

Dorian hit the archipelago Sept. 1 as a Category 5 hurricane, with sustained winds of 185 mph and gusts over 220 mph. The storm damaged or destroyed more than 60% of the homes on the Abaco Islands and did more damage as it settled over Grand Bahama Island.

Dorian struck the US coastline as a Category 2 hurricane, causing widespread flooding and power outages along the Carolinas — and later knocking out power to more than 500,000 in eastern Canada.

It was expected to fizzle out over the North Atlantic by Wednesday.

But the storm is estimated to have caused $5.2 billion in damages in the Bahamas, Puerto Rico, US Virgin Islands and along the US East Coast, according to insurance adjusters Karen Clark & Co.

Meanwhile, Bahamian tourism officials said the best way to help rebuild the storm-wrecked islands is to visit them — noting that they consist of 700 islands over 100,000 square miles of water, most of it fine.

“As the public seeks information on how they can best help the country recover, the Bahamas Ministry of Tourism & Aviation urges consumers to know that the best thing they can do for the country, now more than ever is simple: visit the Bahamas,” the ministry said in a statement.

With Post wires