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Storm dumps snow that shuts down highway for 500 miles and prompts tornado advisories in Minnesota and other states

By Jennifer Gray, CNN Meteorologist and Steve Almasy, CNN

A storm system stretching up the midsection of the United States had people in several states — including southern Minnesota — bracing Tuesday for the possibility of tornadoes.

By Tuesday evening there were tornado watches or warnings covering parts of Texas, Iowa and Minnesota.

One apparent tornado struck in Central Texas. Temple Fire Rescue Chief Mitch Randles said a twister hit south Bell County, near the city of Salado.

“Reports of trees down and damaged homes,” he told CNN in an email.

Forecasters also said there was a possibility of up to 3 feet of snow in the northern Plains. One storm prompted the closure of an interstate through North Dakota and Montana.

After dumping the first-ever measurable snowfall in April on Monday in Portland, Oregon, the storm system’s severe threat broadened Tuesday.

A Level 4 out of 5 “moderate” risk for severe weather is expected for about 800,000 people across parts of Iowa, with Sioux City, Ames, Mason City and Fort Dodge in the bull’s-eye where the biggest storms are likely to develop, according to the Storm Prediction Center.

On Tuesday afternoon, the prediction center issued a tornado watch for northeast Nebraska, southeast South Dakota and northwest Iowa. The watch includes Sioux City and is in effect until 10 p.m. CT. In addition to the threat of tornadoes, large hail — up to tennis ball-sized — and wind gusts up to 75 mph are also a concern.

Forecasters had similar worries for 11 counties in northwest Iowa and seven counties in southern Minnesota. The watch ends at 10 p.m. CT.

More than 14 million more people are included in a Level 3 out of 5 “enhanced” risk for severe weather Tuesday, including those in Dallas; Kansas City, Missouri; and Omaha, Nebraska.

Anyone from Houston to Austin, Texas, Oklahoma City, New Orleans and Louisville, Kentucky, also needs to be on the lookout for storms.

In Texas, more than 8 million people were under a tornado watch until 11 p.m. CT. The watch area stretches from Dallas to San Marcos. A couple of tornadoes are possible, along with very large hail up to 2.5 inches in diameter, and wind gusts of 70 mph, according to the prediction center.

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The center said earlier in its forecast: “Scattered severe thunderstorms capable of producing very large hail, damaging winds, and tornadoes should occur beginning late Tuesday afternoon and continuing through Tuesday night across a broad portion of the southern/central Plains into the Mississippi Valley. Some of the tornadoes could be strong.”

The storm is intensifying as it moves east and combining with an abundance of moisture from an atmospheric river that’s drawing the moisture from the Gulf of Mexico.

“A potentially volatile severe thunderstorm environment will develop across a broad area of the central/southern Plains into the lower/mid MS Valley by late afternoon,” the prediction center said.

Strong tornadoes, large hail and damaging winds forecast

Temperatures soared Tuesday afternoon in places like Dallas, where the high temperature reached the mid-80s. This makes the atmosphere ripe for storms to develop and become strong.

“Convection that develops in this thermodynamic environment is favored to become supercellular rapidly primarily posing a threat for very large hail (hail from the size of golf balls to baseballs) and damaging wind gusts, though tornadoes are also possible,” the National Weather Service office in Dallas said.

Read what makes a storm a supercell

Strong southerly winds are also making the environment conducive for storm formation. Winds ahead of the storms will blow at 30 to 35 mph, which also makes fire conditions difficult just west of the severe risk area.

In places a little farther north, there is still a little uncertainty about when exactly the storms will start firing up.

“The current concern will be how quickly storms develop along the frontal boundary as it advances east into the late evening and overnight hours,” said the weather service office in Kansas City.

Storms are forecast to begin around 9 p.m. CT (10 p.m. ET) but could rev up as late as 11 p.m. CT, posing a dangerous scenario of nocturnal storms.

“Night time storms, regardless of the hazard, wind, tornado, hail, pose significant challenges to warning the public,” the Kansas City weather service office said.

“Ensure you have multiple ways to get warning information, specifically ones that will wake you up, such as NOAA Weather Radio and Weather Apps; which means keeping your phone ringer on tonight.”

Know these severe weather safety tips

Severe threat continues Wednesday

The storms will push east Wednesday, again posing a Level 4 out of 5 “moderate” risk of severe weather for more than 4.5 million people. The moderate risk includes Memphis, Tennessee; Evansville, Indiana; and Jonesboro, Arkansas.

A large Level 3 out of 5 “enhanced” risk surrounds the moderate risk, stretching from northern Louisiana to northern Indiana. Places like Indianapolis, Nashville, Louisville and St. Louis are all in this zone. Other cities like Chicago, New Orleans, Dallas and Detroit also will remain under the threat of storms Wednesday.

“Damaging winds, some of which could be significant, several tornadoes (some strong), and large to very large hail will likely occur,” the prediction center said in its forecast discussion.

Wind gusts of more than 75 mph are possible as well, which could lead to downed trees and numerous power outages.

By Thursday, the storms push east with a much drier, more pleasant air mass behind them.

Late season blizzard slams parts of the US

The storm system will bring quite a different setup to parts of the northern Plains, with blizzard warnings up for portions of the Dakotas and Montana. Whiteout conditions will make travel nearly impossible in some places.

“Snow accumulations of up to 36 inches are possible in parts of north central North Dakota, with widespread wind gusts up to 50 mph across the area,” said the National Weather Service office in Bismarck, North Dakota.

More than 500 miles of interstate are closed in Montana and North Dakota. Interstate 94 is closed from Billings, Montana, to Jamestown, North Dakota, according to the Montana Department of Transportation and the North Dakota Highway Patrol.

“We do get blizzards in April, but one of this intensity is quite rare,” Jeff Schild, meteorologist for the weather service office in Bismarck, told CNN early Tuesday. “The last one of note for this level of intensity was April 4-7 in 1997.”

Much of the region is in drought conditions, so the snowfall will be beneficial, Schild said. “Right now we are only sitting at 34.3 inches of snow for the year,” he said.

Bismarck could even break records for the most snow in a multiday event.

There’s still uncertainty about where the heaviest bands of snow will set up, but regardless, there will be widespread, impressive snowfall rates, the Bismarck forecast office said in its forecast discussion.

“Snow will become heavy across much of the west and central, with snow rates of over 1″ per hour likely to be sustained through much of today,” it said. “The falling snow with strong winds will lead to whiteout conditions, especially with the enhanced snowfall rates.”

The snow will end by Thursday, and very cold temperatures will follow.

“Overnight lows will drop into the teens in western North Dakota, and with the strong winds, wind chills will be in the single digits above to below zero, quite chilly for mid April,” said the Bismarck weather service office.

As high temperatures only make it into the 20s on Friday — about 30 degrees below normal — this region could break low maximum temperature records.

The-CNN-Wire
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CNN’s Taylor Ward and Amy Simonson contributed to this report.

Article Topic Follows: CNN-Weather/Environment

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