Hail ranging in size from quarters to baseballs hit parts of the Midwest and heavy snow fell in the Rockies overnight as parts of the U.S. experienced severe weather that included thunderstorms, heavy rain and at least one possible tornado.
Severe thunderstorm warnings were in place across parts of Illinois and Missouri until at least midday.
The National Weather Service in Kansas City, Missouri, warned residents to stay inside and stay away from windows because “this storm has a history of producing softball-sized hail (3.5 inches).”
NBC affiliate KSHB of Kansas City reported that drivers were sheltering under a bridge on the Interstate 70 to avoid baseball-sized hail, which has smashed windshields.
The weather service in Topeka, Kansas, said hail as big as quarters and gusts up to 60 mph could last until Thursday morning. Video showed what appeared to be a huge tornado moving through northwest Kansas Wednesday night.
The Storm Prediction Center said early Thursday that “scattered severe thunderstorms capable of tornadoes [and] large to very large hail” was possible from parts of the south-central states into the Midwest.
The area most likely to face the most severe conditions is a corridor from southeast Oklahoma into northern Arkansas and southern Missouri during Thursday afternoon and evening.
Nearly 13,000 customers in Colorado were without power as of 5 a.m. ET, with CORE Electric Cooperative warning that “significant” snowfall could affect services through Friday.
So far, Aspen Springs has recorded 23 inches of snow; Pinecliffe, 18.5; Jamestown, 14.3; Evergreen, 13.5; and Nederland, 12.1.
The snow is expected to continue Thursday, with snowfall rates of 2 to 3 inches an hour at times. It is not expected to let up until Friday morning.
The Colorado Department of Transportation urged drivers to stay home and keep the roads as a storm was predicted to dump multiple feet of snow on the Denver metro region, up to 1 or 2 inches per hour, raising the risk of avalanches…
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