Current:Home > ContactWild week of US weather includes heat wave, tropical storm, landslide, flash flood and snow -PureWealth Academy
Wild week of US weather includes heat wave, tropical storm, landslide, flash flood and snow
View
Date:2025-04-24 17:09:25
FALCON HEIGHTS, Minn. (AP) — It’s been a wild week of weather in many parts of the United States, from heat waves to snowstorms to flash floods.
Here’s a look at some of the weather events:
Midwest sizzles under heat wave
Millions of people in the Midwest have been enduring dangerous heat and humidity.
An emergency medicine physician treating Minnesota State Fair-goers for heat illnesses saw firefighters cut rings off two people’s swollen fingers Monday in hot weather that combined with humidity made it feel well over 100 degrees Fahrenheit (37.7 degrees Celsius).
Soaring late summer temperatures also prompted some Midwestern schools to let out early or cancel sports practices. The National Weather Service issued heat warnings or advisories across Minnesota, Iowa, South Dakota, Illinois, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, Wisconsin and Oklahoma. Several cities including Chicago opened cooling centers.
Forecasters said Tuesday also will be scorching hot for areas of the Midwest before the heat wave shifts to the south and east.
West Coast mountains get early snowstorm
An unusually cold storm on the mountain peaks along the West Coast late last week brought a hint of winter in August. The system dropped out of the Gulf of Alaska, down through the Pacific Northwest and into California. Mount Rainier, southeast of Seattle, got a high-elevation dusting, as did central Oregon’s Mt. Bachelor resort.
Mount Shasta, the Cascade Range volcano that rises to 14,163 feet (4,317 meters) above far northern California, wore a white blanket after the storm clouds passed. The mountain’s Helen Lake, which sits at 10,400 feet (3,170 meters) received about half a foot of snow (15 centimeters), and there were greater amounts at higher elevations, according to the U.S. Forest Service’s Shasta Ranger Station.
Tropical storm dumps heavy rain on Hawaii
Three tropical cyclones swirled over the Pacific Ocean on Monday, including Tropical Storm Hone, which brought heavy rain to Hawaii, Hurricane Gilma, which was gaining strength, and Tropical Storm Hector which was churning westward, far off the coast of southern tip of Baja California.
The biggest impacts from Tropical Storm Hone (pronounced hoe-NEH) were rainfall and flash floods that resulted in road closures, downed power lines and damaged trees in some areas of the Big Island, said William Ahue, a forecaster at the Central Pacific Hurricane Center in Honolulu. No injuries or major damage had been reported, authorities said.
Deadly Alaska landslide crashes into homes
A landslide that cut a path down a steep, thickly forested hillside crashed into several homes in Ketchikan, Alaska, in the latest such disaster to strike the mountainous region. Sunday’s slide killed one person and injured three others and prompted the mandatory evacuation of nearby homes in the city, a popular cruise ship stop along the famed Inside Passage in the southeastern Alaska panhandle.
The slide area remained unstable Monday, and authorities said that state and local geologists were arriving to assess the area for potential secondary slides. Last November, six people — including a family of five — were killed when a landslide destroyed two homes in Wrangell, north of Ketchikan.
Flash flood hits Grand Canyon National Park
The body of an Arizona woman who disappeared in Grand Canyon National Park after a flash flood was recovered Sunday, park rangers said. The body of Chenoa Nickerson, 33, was discovered by a group rafting down the Colorado River through the Grand Canyon, the park said in a statement.
Nickerson was hiking along Havasu Creek about a half-mile (800 meters) from where it meets up with the Colorado River when the flash flood struck. Nickerson’s husband was among the more than 100 people safely evacuated.
The flood trapped several hikers in the area above and below Beaver Falls, one of a series of usually blue-green waterfalls that draw tourists from around the world to the Havasupai Tribe’s reservation. The area is prone to flooding that turns its iconic waterfalls chocolate brown.
veryGood! (3)
Related
- Sarah J. Maas books explained: How to read 'ACOTAR,' 'Throne of Glass' in order.
- Bachelor Nation's Nick Viall and Fiancée Natalie Joy Reveal Sex of Their First Baby
- Ruschell Boone, award-winning NY1 TV anchor, dies at 48 of pancreatic cancer
- Mexico’s Supreme Court decriminalizes abortion nationwide
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- New Pennsylvania Legislation Aims to Classify ‘Produced Water’ From Fracking as Hazardous Waste
- Meet Apollo, the humanoid robot that could be your next coworker
- The dementia tax
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- Jonathan Majors' domestic violence trial delayed again in alleged assault case
Ranking
- Small twin
- How much do NFL players care about their Madden rating? A lot, actually.
- Raiders DE Chandler Jones away from team for 'private matter' after Instagram posts
- NFL power rankings: Which teams are looking good entering Week 1?
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- South African conservation NGO to release 2,000 rhinos into the wild
- New Pennsylvania Legislation Aims to Classify ‘Produced Water’ From Fracking as Hazardous Waste
- Christie says DeSantis put ‘politics ahead of his job’ by not seeing Biden during hurricane visit
Recommendation
Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
2 tourists die in same waters off Outer Banks within 24 hours
Pregnant Kourtney Kardashian Speaks Out After Hospitalization for Urgent Fetal Surgery
Jennifer Love Hewitt Addresses Comments She Looks Different After Debuting Drastic Hair Change
British golfer Charley Hull blames injury, not lack of cigarettes, for poor Olympic start
Arkansas blogger files suit seeking records related to Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders’ travel, security
Americans drink a staggering amount of Diet Coke, other sodas. What does it do to our stomachs?
Dramatic shot of a falcon striking a pelican wins Bird Photographer of the Year top prize