USA TODAY US Edition

Storm buries Rockies in snow, heads to Midwest

- Ryan W. Miller Contributi­ng: John Bacon and Elinor Aspegren; The Associated Press

After a “crippling” winter storm dumped up to 4 feet of snow in the Rocky Mountains – closing roads, canceling flights and prompting avalanche warnings over the weekend – the system was expected to dump snow on the Midwest and spark thundersto­rms in the South.

“A band of moderate snow with some mixed precipitat­ion is moving across the Midwest and should reach the upper Midwest and lower Michigan,” forecaster­s at the National Weather Service said early Monday.

The storm will cause “a burst of heavy snow” in Iowa and Minnesota before moving east, said AccuWeathe­r senior meteorolog­ist Dan Pydynowski. Eastern parts of South Dakota and Nebraska, Iowa, southern Minnesota, Wisconsin, Illinois and Michigan could all see the storm’s effects.

The weather service in La Crosse, Wisconsin, and Des Moines, Iowa, said the snow could fall at a rate of more than an inch an hour. Up to 18 inches was possible in areas along the Iowa and Minnesota border, according to AccuWeathe­r.

The storm was expected to hit Chicago and turn into a wintry mix, Pydynowski said. Mixed precipitat­ion was expected in the Appalachia­ns, the weather service said.

Meanwhile, thundersto­rms were expected to roll through the South through Tuesday before another system midweek sparks even more thundersto­rms.

AccuWeathe­r said the storm will stall over the South on Tuesday, “leading to rounds of downpours from Louisiana to the Carolinas throughout the day.”

The severe weather “will tend to repeat itself” through the week, the weather service warned.

Another snowstorm was already pressing east in California and the Pacific Northwest, bringing mountain snow and rain, and intensify over the southern Plains, by Wednesday morning, the weather service said.

That could mean more thundersto­rms, tornadoes and torrential downpours by midweek in Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana, Tennessee, Mississipp­i and Alabama, according to AccuWeathe­r.

Cold air on the back end of the storm means more snow is expected in the Rockies and northern Plains at the same time, the weather service said.

Over the weekend, the storm blanketed Colorado, Wyoming and Nebraska and led to widespread disruption of travel with the heaviest snow of the year in the West so far.

The 25.8 inches that fell in Cheyenne, Wyoming, over the weekend smashed a two-day record held since 1979, according to the weather service.

Snow plows were driving off the roadway in the Casper, Wyoming, area because of poor visibility, causing the state’s department of transporta­tion to suspend plowing.

The storm closed sections of Interstate 25 and Interstate 80 and led to many schools and government buildings closing for Monday. Denver Internatio­nal Airport and Northern Colorado Regional Airport also closed their runways on Sunday, with most flights already canceled.

The storm also sparked an avalanche warning west of Fort Collins, Boulder, Denver and Colorado Springs. The Colorado Department of Transporta­tion said an avalanche blocked Highway 14 in north-central Colorado on Sunday.

Parts of Texas were also recovering from storms and tornadoes that hit over the weekend. In Amarillo, dozens of hikers were evacuated from a trail after two possible tornadoes in the area. Randall County Sheriff Christophe­r Forbis reported hail the size of baseballs.

“Power lines and a cell tower are down,” Amarillo Area Emergency Management Director Chad Orton said. “One house was damaged, but the family was in the basement ... there have been no injuries or fatalities.”

 ?? ISAIAH J. DOWNING/ USA TODAY SPORTS ?? A worker clears snow in front of Ball Arena before the game between the Colorado Avalanche and the Los Angeles Kings.
ISAIAH J. DOWNING/ USA TODAY SPORTS A worker clears snow in front of Ball Arena before the game between the Colorado Avalanche and the Los Angeles Kings.

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