Cesar Cornejo's WMAR-2 News Monday weather
Cesar Cornejo's WMAR-2 News Monday weather
And if Mother Nature again smiles favorably upon us, it will happen again Monday.
Dramatic footage from Helena, Montana, showed roaring floodwaters overwhelming streets in the city on July 3. A storm began to sweep through Helena on Sunday evening, bringing fierce wind gusts and significant flooding with it. Video acquired by Storyful and shot by passerby Andy Shirtliff showed water up to the wheel well of vehicles as they drove through downtown Helena. The water made its way into some buildings downtown, including The Lewis and Clark Library. Maintenance teams worked quickly
AccuWeather meteorologists expect temperatures to skyrocket across the Intermountain West heading into this weekend, with a few locales potentially reaching their hottest levels of the year thus far. A northward shift in the jet stream will allow a 'heat dome' to build across much of the West and High Plains during the latter part of the week. Underneath these heat domes, the air sinks, causing temperatures to climb and precipitation and cloud cover to generally be limited. Following a generally
A line of storms is expected to sweep through Minnesota early Monday morning.
He was taken to a hospital, officials said.
Temperatures more than 20 degrees above normal will bathe the Arctic Circle for the first half of July.
Residents in northern New Mexico prepared for another day of flash flooding. On Saturday, those in Pendaries were seen placing sandbags and building trenches along roads. The area is located near burn scars from the Calf Canyon/Hermits Peak fire. "We can have some flooding, but not like this. Not running down roads that we've never seen it run down before, moving buildings and cars," Aaron Atencio, manager at Pendaries RV Park, said.
Aftershocks continue rumbling through the Midlands following a series of relatively powerful earthquakes.
The heat index will climb into the 100s during the week, then create scattered storms, according to NWS predictions.
Events in the eastern South Pacific along the western coast of South America impact Jacksonville and Florida. It's about La Nina, El Nino and ENSO.
More than 30,000 residents of Sydney and its surrounds were told to evacuate or prepare to abandon their homes Monday as Australia’s largest city faces its fourth, and possibly worst, round of flooding in less than a year and a half. Days of torrential rain caused dams to overflow and waterways to break their banks, bringing a new flood emergency to parts of the city of 5 million people. “The latest information we have is that there’s a very good chance that the flooding will be worse than any of the other three floods that those areas had in the last 18 months,” Emergency Management Minister Murray Watt said.
Rain showers and storms could linger through the week, according to the National Weather Service.
Finishing the long holiday weekend with wet weather including a thunderstorm threat.
Firefighters were working late to finish containment.
Torrential rain is lashing Australia's southeast coast, forcing thousands of people from their homes because of the danger of floods and landslides in a region battered by major flooding four times in the past 18 months. Some areas in New South Wales state have received a month's rain in the past two days, swelling rivers and forcing Sydney's main dam, the Warragamba Dam, to spill on the weekend. Flooding in March and April in New South Wales and southeast Queensland state resulted in A$4.8 billion ($3.3 billion) in insured damage, the Insurance Council of Australia estimated.
At least seven hikers were killed in the devastating avalanche, while eight people suffered injuries and 14 others remained missing Monday.
Parts of Camp Roberts are still without power.
DFW temperatures were 4.2 degrees above average for the month, with nine 100-degree days.
STORY: The footage showed an excavator working among floodwater in Fuchuan, Guangxi province on Sunday (July 3).In Zhanjiang, Guangdong province, rescuers were seen transporting residents over inundated roads.Heavy rain is expected to hit central and southern China over the next few days as the expansive rain belts of a weakening typhoon sweep inland from the country's southern coastline.
STORY: Thousands of residents were ordered to evacuate southwest Sydney, with torrential rain and damaging winds pounding the east coast and threatening floods in areas that were hammered in March.More than 8 inches of rain have fallen over many areas with some hit by 14 inches, the Bureau of Meteorology said, warning of flood risks along the Nepean River.The heavy rains caused Sydney's main dam to spill overnight, water authorities said, adding that modelling showed the spill would be comparable to a major spill in March 2021 at the Warragamba Dam.