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Doden en overlast door sneeuw en wind in VS

Een groot deel van het Midwesten van de Verenigde Staten gaat gebukt onder noodweer. Een stormfront, dat zich uitstrekt van het zuidelijke kustgebied tot aan de Grote Meren in het noorden van het land, leidt tot zware windstoten, veel regen, hagel en sneeuw.

Vanwege het slechte weer zijn honderden vluchten geannuleerd en veel wegen afgesloten. Vooral in de staat Minnesota zijn de problemen groot: de luchthaven van Minneapolis had bijvoorbeeld grote moeite met het sneeuwvrij maken van de start- en landingsbanen en het de-icen van vliegtuigen. Daardoor kon er geen vliegtuig opstijgen of landen: bijna 500 vluchten werden geannuleerd.

Ook op de weg is de overlast aanzienlijk. De autoriteiten hebben verschillende snelwegen in het zuidwesten van Minnesota afgesloten en raden mensen af te gaan reizen. De problemen zijn bovendien nog niet voorbij: de Amerikaanse weerdienst zegt dat er in Minnesota vandaag tot een halve meter sneeuw kan vallen.

Overstromingen
Elders in het Midwesten zijn ook grote problemen. In South Dakota is reizen door sneeuw en windstoten bijna onmogelijk geworden en in Michigan braken hoogspanningskabels door de harde wind, waardoor duizenden mensen enige tijd zonder stroom zaten. In Texas vielen hagelstenen zo groot als eieren.

De Amerikaanse weerdienst waarschuwt ook voor mogelijke overstromingen langs Lake Michigan, in het noorden. Inwoners van Chicago moeten rekening houden met golven tot 5,5 meter hoog.

Doden
Door het slecht weer zijn verschillende mensen om het leven gekomen. In Louisiana kwam een meisje van 2 het leven toen er door de harde wind een boom op haar huis viel. In Wisconsin overleed een vrouw toen ze de controle over haar busje verloor.

Vrijdag kwam een vrachtwagenchauffeur om toen hij door de sneeuw geen controle meer had over zijn wagen en tegen een tractor met pech terecht kwam. Hij overleed ter plekke.

https://nos.nl/artikel/22(...)w-en-wind-in-vs.html

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quote:
A storm system stretching from the Gulf Coast to the Great Lakes has buffeted the central U.S. with heavy snow, winds, rain and hail, forcing flight cancellations, creating treacherous road conditions and killing at least three people, including one in Wisconsin where some areas could see totals of up to 30 inches of snowfall by Monday morning.

"It really is a pretty significant storm that is under way," said Andy Boxell, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Sullivan.

In the Upper Midwest, the early spring storm brought snow to a region pining for sunshine and warmth. Around 400 flights were canceled at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, which grounded all flights Saturday afternoon as heavy snow made it difficult to keep runways clear and planes deiced, while blizzard conditions forced the airport in South Dakota's biggest city, Sioux Falls, to remain closed for a second straight day.

Two storm-related deaths occurred early Saturday. In Louisiana, winds downed a tree onto a mobile home in Haughton, killing a sleeping 2-year-old girl inside, according to the Bossier Parish Sheriff's Office.

In Wisconsin, a 30-year-old Portage woman was killed when the minivan she was a passenger in struck an oncoming SUV on a slippery Highway 16 in the town of Lewiston, about 6 miles east of Wisconsin Dells, the Columbia County Sheriff’s Office said. Three others in the minvan and the SUV driver were hospitalized.

On Friday, a truck driver from Idaho lost control of his rig on snow-covered Interstate 80 near Chappell in western Nebraska and slammed into a semi that had become stranded, according to the Nebraska State Patrol. He died at the scene.

Authorities closed several highways in southwestern Minnesota, where no travel was advised, and driving conditions were difficult across the southern half of the state.

The National Weather Service predicted that a large swath of southern Minnesota, including Minneapolis and St. Paul, could get up to 20 inches of snow by the time the storm blows through on Sunday.

The Minnesota Twins home game against the Chicago White Sox was snowed out Saturday, marking the first back-to-back postponements of baseball games in the stadium's nine seasons.

Sunday's game was also called off because of the storm, which by Saturday night had buried Minneapolis under more than 13 inches of snow. The Yankees and Tigers were rained out Saturday in Detroit.

"It's a cool experience for me, the best Minneapolis experience," Niko Heiligman, of Aachen, Germany, said as he braved the snow Saturday to take a walk along the Mississippi River in downtown Minneapolis. "I'm only here for the weekend, so I guess that's how it goes. There's snow and it's cold. So it's good."

The storm is expected to persist through Sunday in Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan before moving into New York state and New England.

The region hardest hit in Wisconsin on Saturday, with up to 18 inches of snow, stretched from Eau Claire to Wausau to Green Bay and into Door County, Boxell said, adding that those areas could end up with a total of as much as 30 inches after a second wave on Sunday.

Winds of up to 55 mph caused blowing and drifting snow, along with ice shoves in Green Bay.

The National Weather Service also warned of potential coastal flooding along Lake Michigan in Wisconsin and Illinois, where Chicago residents were warned that waves could reach as high as 18 feet.

Madison experienced high winds with gusts up to 49 mph Saturday afternoon before a mix sleet, snow and freezing rain moved in. When that mix would transition to snow would determine how much snow the city sees, with 4 to 6 inches possible by Monday morning, Boxell said.

Snow and wind gusts of up to 50 mph were whipping through parts of South Dakota for a second straight day Saturday, causing blizzard conditions that made travel all but impossible. While the blizzard warning was lifted in the western part of the state, it remained in effect for much of southern and eastern South Dakota.

No travel was advised in Sioux Falls, where police said the blowing snow made it hard to see anything. Several inches of snow fell in various parts of the state, including 18 inches in the eastern South Dakota city of Huron.

The storm and powerful winds knocked out power to thousands of customers in Michigan, which was expected to get more snow and ice through the weekend.

In Arkansas, a tornado ripped through the tiny Ozark Mountain town of Mountainburg on Friday, injuring at least four people and causing widespread damage. Video showed uprooted trees, overturned cars, damaged buildings and downed power lines. Powerful winds also damaged several buildings at the University of Central Arkansas, though no injuries were reported there.

The storm made its mark in Texas, too, where hail the size of hen eggs fell on areas south of Dallas and Fort Worth, according to meteorologist Patricia Sanchez. In Austin, fire officials said strong winds helped spread the flames after lightning struck two houses that suffered heavy damage.
  Moderator maandag 16 april 2018 @ 12:23:03 #3
8781 crew  Frutsel
pi_178550295
ik zag het op TV vanochtend :o

bizarre hoeveelheden voor midden april :o

jammer dat dat hier niet gebeurd..ik ken wat users die dan ontploffen in de atmosfeer :P
pi_178554608
quote:
0s.gif Op maandag 16 april 2018 12:23 schreef Frutsel het volgende:
ik zag het op TV vanochtend :o

bizarre hoeveelheden voor midden april :o

jammer dat dat hier niet gebeurd..ik ken wat users die dan ontploffen in de atmosfeer :P
haha :)

Was wel leuk geweest.
pi_178558462
Record Snowstorm For April
Xanto officially brought 14.9 inches of snow to Minneapolis/St. Paul, making it the heaviest April snowstorm on record there.

Winter Storm Xanto also pushed Minneapolis/St. Paul to its snowiest April on record.

Green Bay, Wisconsin, picked up an astonishing 23.5 inches of snow from Xanto, ranking not only as the city's heaviest April storm but also the second-heaviest snowstorm of all-time. Blizzard conditions were also observed in Green Bay 11 a.m.-2 p.m. on Sunday.


In north-central Wisconsin, 22.6 inches of snow piled up in Wausau, making Xanto the heaviest April snowstorm on record there.

Sioux Falls, South Dakota, received 13.7 inches of snow from Xanto on Saturday, making it the heaviest one-day April snow total on record in the city.

The highest snowfall total so far is 33 inches near Amherst, Wisconsin. Drifts 5 to 6 feet high were also reported in that location.
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