More floods loom as high river waters
recede in Midwest
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[March 25, 2019]
By Karen Dillon
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (Reuters) - Record floods
that submerged parts of three Midwestern states bringing death and
destruction were retreating in Kansas City on Monday but icy tributaries
in Montana and the Dakotas threatened more floods for weeks to come, the
National Weather Service said.
High flood waters have already returned in the western Dakotas,
northwest Nebraska and central and eastern Montana, along smaller rivers
that feed into the Missouri, David Roth, a meteorologist with the NWS's
Weather Prediction Center in College Park, Maryland, said on Monday.
Warmer weather makes the once solid river ice break-up into giant
chunks, like mini-icebergs, Roth said.
"The ice floats down river until it bunches up in what we call an
ice-jam, like a dam, causing flooding," he said.
"All that backed-up water is eventually going downstream," Roth said.
"It'll come down the Missouri in a couple of weeks, and maybe hit Kansas
City in mid-April."
Midwest floods were unleashed last week after a "bomb cyclone" storm
dumped torrential rains on hundreds of square miles (km) of the
snow-covered Plains.
The record flows cascaded down the Missouri, the country's longest
river, killing at least four people, drowning livestock and closing
dozens of roads in Nebraska and Iowa. Property losses were estimated at
more than $3 billion in those two states.
Those flood waters crested near Kansas City on Sunday, the weather
service said.
No further precipitation is forecast for the Midwest until midweek, when
moderate rainfall is expected, NWS's Andrew Orrison said Sunday.
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The Kansas side of the Missouri River is seen in Atchison, Kansas,
U.S., March 22, 2019 in this picture obtained from social media.
SHAWN RIZZA/via REUTERS
"I think at the worst what it will do is just prolong the gradual
receding of the water levels across the various river basins
throughout the Midwest."
The current flooding threatens Kansas City's drinking water. More
than 600,000 customers in the Kansas City metropolitan area were
asked to conserve water as flood-levels in the Missouri River
created "treatment challenges," the city's water utility said on
Sunday.
But far up the nation's longest river, floods loom again.
The Billings Gazette reported late Sunday that rapid snow melt drove
ice jams on the Little Bighorn River, forced the shutdown of a
stretches of major highways in eastern Montanta all the way to the
Wyoming border.
But the bigger threat is warmer temperatures that will hit the upper
60s in Billings by Tuesday and into midweek, driving more snowmelt
that will eventually flow south, said meteorologist Roth.
"All that water is still headed downstream," he said.
(Reporting by Karen Dillon; Additional reporting and writing by Rich
McKay in Atlanta; additional reporting by Peter Szekely and Andrew
Hay, Editing by William Maclean)
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