USA TODAY US Edition

IN THE PATH OF HARVEY

‘Trapped’ storm could dump trillions of gallons of rain

- Doyle Rice

Texas residents prepare for Hurricane Harvey, potentiall­y the USA’s strongest storm in 12 years. The hurricane could make landfall late Friday.

Hurricane Harvey will turn into a “beast” of a storm, meteorolog­ists said, one that’s forecast to bring catastroph­ic, life-threatenin­g flooding to much of Texas.

Even after the storm makes landfall late Friday or early Saturday near Corpus Christi as a likely Category 3 hurricane — potentiall­y the USA’s strongest hurricane in 12 years — Harvey will stall and spin for the next three to five days, dumping up to

2 feet of rain across the region. “The forecast for Harvey continues to grow more dire,” warned the National Weather Service in Corpus Christi.

Though a 4- to 6-foot storm surge and howling winds above

100 mph could be deadly, the biggest concern over the storm may be flooding from days of torrential rain. Harvey “may be nothing short of a flooding disaster,” for Texas, according to AccuWeathe­r meteorolog­ist Alex Sosnowski, who said some communitie­s could be underwater for days.

The storm will cause much worse damage from flooding and wind than would normally occur from a fast-moving storm of similar size, he said.

Once it moves ashore, even if it weakens to a tropical storm, Harvey will essentiall­y be “trapped” between two sprawling areas of high pressure, the National Weather Service said. One highpressu­re area will be over the Desert Southwest and the other central Gulf of Mexico, Weather Channel meteorolog­ist Jon Erdman said. This will leave Harvey as a potent but rudderless rainstorm that has nothing to steer it or push it around.

While it sits and spins, phenomenal amounts of rain will be wrung out of Harvey; some projection­s say as much as 30 inches. It’s possible Harvey’s heavy rain may not entirely exit the areas of Texas it soaks until Wednesday.

“This could become a prolonged and very dangerous rain event,” the weather service in Houston said.

In all, the storm could dump at least 15 trillion gallons of water on Texas, WeatherBel­l meteorolog­ist Ryan Maue said.

In addition to the Corpus Christi area, near where the storm should make landfall, Harvey “has the potential to cause very serious flooding in such highly populated, flood-prone regions as the Austin-San Antonio corridor and the Houston metro area,” Weather Undergroun­d meteorolog­ist Jeff Masters said.

Harvey may be the strongest landfall in the Texas Coastal Bend since Category 3 Hurricane Celia hammered the Corpus Christi area in August 1970 with wind gusts up to 161 mph, the Weather Channel said.

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 ?? GABE HERNANDEZ, USA TODAY NETWORK ?? David Montes boards up windows at a home in Corpus Christi, Texas, as the National Weather Service warned that the forecast for Hurricane Harvey “continues to grow more dire.”
GABE HERNANDEZ, USA TODAY NETWORK David Montes boards up windows at a home in Corpus Christi, Texas, as the National Weather Service warned that the forecast for Hurricane Harvey “continues to grow more dire.”
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