martedì 26 luglio 2022

Historic St. Louis flash flooding strands residents, closes roads

Torrential downpours sparked flash flooding in St. Louis and surrounding areas Tuesday, killing at least one person and stranding residents in their cars and homes as the rainfall shattered a record set more than a century ago.
The city had received more than 9 inches of rain by the afternoon, the most ever recorded there in a calendar day and about two inches more than the record of about 7 inches set in August 1915, when remnants of a hurricane that came ashore in Galveston, Tex., passed through the area. In six hours, 7.68 inches of rain fell in St. Louis — an event with less than a 1 in 1,000 chance of occurring in a given year, according to the Weather Service. Some areas northwest of the city of St. Louis saw rainfall totals up to a foot.
Firefighters had responded to roughly 70 rescues by late Tuesday morning, St. Louis Fire Chief Dennis Jenkerson told reporters. On one block in the western fitness part of the city, the fire department said, it had used an inflatable boat to rescue six people and six dogs trapped in about 18 homes amid severe flooding. About 15 people chose to shelter in place. Torrential downpours on July 26, brought flash flooding to St. Louis and surrounding areas. (Video: The Washington Post) Around 10 a.m., a person’s body was pulled out of a car that had been covered by about 8½ feet of floodwater, Jenkerson said. He said the incident was under investigation and did not provide additional details.
Although floodwaters were receding Tuesday afternoon, Jenkerson said the water’s weight had caused some roofs to partially collapse. He called the property damage “significant.”
Videos shared on social media showed many low-lying roads completely inaccessible. Part of a major highway, Interstate 70, was closed because of the flooding as of Tuesday afternoon, the Missouri Department of Transportation said.
St. Louis County emergency officials urged residents not to travel and said they had set up a shelter for displaced people. The central part of the county was most affected by the downpour, they said.
“Exercise extreme caution,” St. Louis city firefighter Garon Patrick Mosby said in a video shared on Twitter. “We are being overrun here.”
Extreme precipitation events have increased substantially over the past century and are tied to warming from human-caused climate change. The heaviest such events increased by 42 percent in the Midwest between 1901 and 2016, with additional increases expected as the climate continues to warm, according to the U.S. government’s National Climate Assessment. The rain in St. Louis began late Monday as thunderstorms formed along a west-to-east line, repeatedly passing over the city like train cars on a track into Tuesday morning. The National Weather Service warned of “life threatening flash flooding” just after 2 a.m. and later declared a flash flood emergency, its most serious flood alert. By then, 3 to 6 inches of rain had fallen and high water was “threatening houses” while vehicles were submerged in high water, according to the Weather Service.
“This is a PARTICULARLY DANGEROUS SITUATION,” it warned. “SEEK HIGHER GROUND NOW!”
A creek in St. Peters, Mo., just northwest of St. Louis, rose 21.5 feet in seven hours to a record crest amid the torrent.
The thunderstorms formed along the northern periphery of a heat dome sprawled over the south-central states, responsible in recent days for record-high temperatures in parts of Texas, Oklahoma and Arkansas. St. Louis was situated in the turbulent transition zone between that oppressive heat and cooler weather entering the Upper Midwest from Canada.
On Tuesday, the Weather Service declared the area from eastern Missouri to central West Virginia under an elevated risk for excessive rainfall, with the greatest risk from the St. Louis area through southern Illinois and into southwest Indiana. That risk is forecast to shift into the area from southeast Missouri through West Virginia on Wednesday and Thursday. Three consecutive days with an elevated threat of flash flooding in central and southern Appalachia as a plume of deep moisture parks over the region. For the latest Excessive Rainfall Outlooks, including an interactive map, go here: https://t.co/4vi9EBZpIU pic.twitter.com/RDPO5wqBvO — Alex Lamers (@AlexJLamers) July 26, 2022

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