Las Vegas Review-Journal

Rocky Mountains have 60-degree plunge in a day

-

Summer came to an abrupt halt in parts of the Rocky Mountains on Tuesday as temperatur­es reaching into the 90s plunged by around 60 degrees in less than 24 hours, with a powerful surge of cold air from Canada unleashing snow and damaging winds in several states.

The roller coaster weather ripped up trees by their roots, piled up snow that shut down parts of the scenic road through Glacier National Park and knocked out power to tens of thousands. But the temperatur­e drop gave some relief to crews fighting wildfires in Colorado and

Montana that had ballooned in hot, windy weather and forced people to flee their homes.

Heat and strong winds also hit California and parts of the Pacific Northwest over the holiday weekend, triggering destructiv­e wildfires.

Snow fell in Colorado, Montana and Wyoming, where portions of Interstate 80 closed and forecaster­s predicted up to a foot in the mountains and temperatur­es in the teens overnight.

In Utah, where temperatur­es dropped by 40 degrees, wind gusts of nearly 100 mph roared through the Salt Lake City area, downing trees and leaving tens of thousands without electricit­y. Several northern Utah school districts canceled classes, and officials warned people to stay inside if possible to avoid flying debris, downed power lines and other dangers. Several semitraile­r trucks blew over on northern Utah highways.

The Utah Capitol, which was already closed to visitors because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, shut to employees as well Tuesday as winds ripped up large trees by their roots, Lt. Gov. Spencer Cox tweeted.

Six inches or more of snow could fall in the northern and central Rockies, the National Weather Service said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States