In some areas on Monday, rioters took control of the streets with little sign of a police presence. In Clapham, a mainly affluent area of southwest London, hundreds looted a department store for at least two hours, witnesses said.
Newspapers declared "mob rule", and one police officer, Paul Deller, admitted on Tuesday: "We simply ran out of units to send."
Police have also urged parents to keep their children at home.
They said too many people had been arrested to hold in the city's police station jails, including three for attempted murder after a police officer was hit by a car in Brent, northwest London.
At least 44 police officers were injured overnight Monday, in addition to at least 35 who were hurt on the previous two evenings, police said.
Despite the scenes of devastation, Acting Police Commissioner Tim Godwin said there were "no plans" for the army to get involved.
The speaker of the House of Commons has agreed to recall parliament on Thursday so lawmakers could debate their response to the riots, Cameron said — a highly unusual move highlighting the seriousness of the crisis.
The violence began on Saturday in the ethnically-mixed north London district of Tottenham, following a protest against Duggan's shooting two days earlier.
An inquest into the 29-year-old's death opened on Tuesday, and heard that he died of a single gunshot wound to the chest after the taxi he was travelling in was stopped by police investigating gun crime in the black community.
Copycat riots broke out in other flashpoint areas on Sunday, and by Monday night they had spread across the city, from the wealthy districts of Notting Hill and Clapham, to inner-city Peckham and Hackney, and suburban Croydon and Ealing.
Cameron visited some of the worst destruction in Croydon in south London, where an entire block of buildings — including a 100-year-old family furniture business — was burned down, sending flames leaping into the night sky.
A 26-year-old man was found with gunshot wounds in a car nearby, and police said Tuesday he had died, becoming the first fatality of the riots. A murder investigation has been launched.
The violence also spread outside London on Monday night, including to the northwest city of Liverpool, where hundreds of rioters rampaged through the streets for several hours, setting cars and dustbins alight.
Police in Birmingham, in central England, said they had made 138 arrests as youths ran riot and looted shops in the city centre overnight, while police in the western city of Bristol battled to contain a mob of 150 youths.
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