Chattanooga Times Free Press

Remnants of Cristobal move into the Midwest after lashing South

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SPRINGFIEL­D, Mo. — The remnants of Tropical Storm Cristobal moved across parts of the Midwest on Tuesday after lashing the South, unleashing downpours and bringing gusty winds as more high winds, heavy rain and thundersto­rms were forecast.

Heavy rain hit Missouri on Tuesday morning and Cristobal was expected to intensify later in the day as another “energetic” weather system approaches from the west and begins to interact with it, the National Weather Service said.

Cristobal may produce flash flooding and isolated river flooding, as well as few tornadoes, the weather service said.

By mid-afternoon, the wind had picked up considerab­ly, with a gust of 62 mph recorded at Midway Internatio­nal Airport, on Chicago’s Southwest Side, according to the weather service. Weather service meteorolog­ist Rafal Ogorek said that winds of 50 mph were expected from late afternoon until about midnight.

Boaters were being warned of gale-force winds on Lake Michigan on Tuesday and Wednesday, and Ogorek said as much as an inch of rain could fall on the region before the storm cleared out.

High winds could be felt from

Nebraska to Wisconsin, forecaster­s said. In parts of Iowa, Minnesota and South Dakota, the gusty winds and low humidity will bring the threat of wildfires in areas with dry grass, forecaster­s warned.

In Iowa, where as much as 4 inches of rain was expected and could send already-swollen creeks and tributarie­s out of their banks, the weather service issued a flash flood watch for most of the state.

In Nebraska, the weather service was warning residents of much of the state to prepare Tuesday and Wednesday for rough weather that could include winds exceeding 65 mph in places, as well as heavy rain, and the possibilit­y of hail and tornadoes in the central and eastern parts of the state.

Cristobal weakened into a depression early Monday after inundating coastal Louisiana and ginning up dangerous weather along most of the U.S. Gulf Coast, sending waves crashing over Mississipp­i beaches, swamping parts of an Alabama island town and spawning a tornado in Florida.

 ?? AP PHOTO/GERALD HERBERT ?? Rudy Horvath walks out of his home, a boathouse in the West End section of New Orleans, as it takes on water Sunday after a from storm surge in Lake Pontchartr­ain before Tropical Storm Cristobal made landfall.
AP PHOTO/GERALD HERBERT Rudy Horvath walks out of his home, a boathouse in the West End section of New Orleans, as it takes on water Sunday after a from storm surge in Lake Pontchartr­ain before Tropical Storm Cristobal made landfall.
 ?? LUKAS FLIPPO/THE SUN HERALD VIA AP ?? A storm surge covers U.S. 90 in Long Beach, Miss., on the Mississipp­i Gulf Coast as Tropical Storm Cristobal makes landfall Sunday.
LUKAS FLIPPO/THE SUN HERALD VIA AP A storm surge covers U.S. 90 in Long Beach, Miss., on the Mississipp­i Gulf Coast as Tropical Storm Cristobal makes landfall Sunday.

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