Slow-moving storm to bring rounds of rain to New Mexico, Texas

AccuWeather meteorologists are monitoring a complex storm that will deliver rounds of heavy rain and thunderstorms from New Mexico through much of southern Texas through Tuesday, leading to zones of flash flooding at times while also helping to ease drought conditions.

A well-defined area of low pressure that was parked over the Desert Southwest much of last week was responsible for thunderstorms from Southern California to Arizona. The storm is finally moving eastward and interacting with a southward-sagging cold front this week. As moisture is drawn in from the Gulf of Mexico, downpours that broke out over the weekend will continue and expand over parts of the south-central and southeastern United States, especially from parts of New Mexico to a large part of Texas into Tuesday.

The aforementioned cold front produced severe thunderstorms in some communities across Oklahoma and Arkansas into Saturday night, causing wind and hail damage. Rainfall from the storms also produced flash flooding in spots, despite the parched nature of the ground.

On Saturday afternoon, a college football game between Auburn and Ole Miss in Oxford, Mississippi, went under a weather delay as lightning moved into the area. As afternoon turned to evening, hail reports of 3 inches were seen near Olyphant, Arkansas, located northeast of Little Rock.

"As the front stalls over the southern Plains region, the storm from Southern California will drift eastward," AccuWeather Meteorologist Matt Benz said, underscoring the idea that repeated downpours from the pesky cold front will be enhanced by the energy from the Southern California disturbance.

These features will combine to create steady rain and ongoing risk for flash flooding where any persistent swaths of rain happen to set up. Urban areas in particular will face difficult travel conditions and low-lying or typical poor drainage areas may become dangerous to traverse at times.

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The highest rainfall totals appear likely to be confined to central and southern Texas near portions of the Mexican border, where 2-4 inches of rain is expected to fall before this storm dives southward into the Gulf of Mexico Tuesday night, with an AccuWeather Local StormMax™ of 7 inches. North and west of that area, a wide swath of 1-2 inches of rain is forecast from Albuquerque, New Mexico, to cities as far east as Dallas, which received its first measurable rainfall Sunday since Sept. 2.

Despite the threat of flooding, this rain will be beneficial in parts of Texas that have not had measurable rainfall since September.

After this storm pulls away, several days of dry weather are expected in the region, hopefully allowing ample time for any floodwaters to recede as sunshine returns and temperatures rebound late this upcoming week.

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